#rubby de la rosa
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baseballjerseynumbers · 2 years ago
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Spring Training:
Rubby De La Rosa assigned 93 (minor league camp)
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diamondbacksdaily · 7 years ago
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@Dbacks: Led by @ArchieBradley7, the #Dbacks take on the song of the summer: Despacito.
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Sadly, my firepit plan has already hit a snag.  Damn you feline asthma!  Nevertheless, the destruction of the Quintuple Club continues with 2017 Topps.  If you saw the 2018 Edition, you are going to see some familiar faces here.  Mark Reynolds, Brandon Belt, and Nate Jones are all back for a second burn.
The team most represented in this lot is the Toronto Blue Jays.  I know the Mariners have three cards as well, but I’m throwing in Randal Grichuk (pictured on the Cardinals) as well because he’d become a Blue Jay right after the 2017 season.
But don’t you fret Mariners fans, Nori Aoki brought a special something to this particular burn.  So far with the Quintuple Club, there has been no player with more than five cards in my duplicate pile.  Mr. Aoki had fucking eight.  And that number is only so low because I made sure to get rid of quite a few when I donated some grab bags for a charity yard sale.
2017′s offering wasn’t as large as 2018′s, but I’m sure I’ll add more as per the usual I still haven’t completed 2017 Topps here in 2019.  Either way, here is the full burn list.
Mark Reynolds (COL) Nate Jones (CHW) Nick Hundley (COL) Colin Rea (SD) Michael Bourn (BAL) JA Happ League Leaders (TOR) Randal Grichuk (STL) Marcus Stroman (TOR) Nori Aoki (SEA) Adam Conley (MIA) Raisel Iglesias (CIN) Rubby De La Rosa (ARI) Joey Gallo (TEX) Anthony Gose (DET) Leonys Martin (SEA) Kole Calhoun (LAA) Zach Duke (STL) Justin Smoak (TOR) Hector Santiago (MIN) Mike Zunino (SEA) Brandon Belt (SF)
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underthecapblog · 5 years ago
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August 25, 2012 - The Boston Red Sox trade Adrian Gonzalez, Carl Crawford, Josh Beckett and Nick Punto to the Los Angeles Dodgers for James Loney for Jerry Sands, Rubby De La Rosa and  Allen Webster. The landmark trade bailed the Red Sox organization out of undesirable long-term contracts that had been signed the prior offseason and paved the way to the team’s 2013 championship. The move was especially surprising, occurring after the traditional non-waiver trade deadline, and involved contracts that many around the league viewed as unmovable.
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wincatcherses · 4 years ago
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Ex jugadores de MLB en NPB: Liga Central de Japón
Por Steve Adams | 5 de junio de 2020 a las 2:14 pm El Nippon Professional Baseball de CDTJapan se dirige al Día de Apertura del 19 de junio. Como es el caso de la Organización de Béisbol de Corea, la liga tiene muchos nombres reconocibles para que los fanáticos de las Grandes Ligas sigan mientras esperamos el regreso del béisbol en América del Norte. NPB es más grande que el KBO (12 equipos vs. 10) y tiene restricciones ligeramente menores para los jugadores extranjeros. Como tal, dividí el resumen de "nombres para ver" en dos publicaciones: esta cubría la Liga Central de Japón y una publicación anterior en la Liga del Pacífico de Japón. Gigantes de Yomiuri (récord 77-64-2 en 2019): Hisashi Iwakuma, RHP: Quizás el jugador más conocido en esta lista, Iwakuma fue una piedra en la rotación de los Marineros de 2012-16 antes de que las lesiones en el hombro interrumpieran una carrera muy fuerte de la MLB. Firmó con los Gigantes de NPB en la temporada baja de 2018-19, pero solo pudo lanzar dos entradas de ligas menores el año pasado. Ahora de 39 años, tendrá otra oportunidad de regresar en 2020. Gerardo Parra, OF: El hombre que trajo "Baby Shark" al Nationals Park y celebró una victoria en la Serie Mundial en octubre pasado, tomó un acuerdo temprano de agente libre con los Gigantes el 20 de noviembre. El jugador de 33 años bateó .250 / .300 / .447 con los Nats el año pasado. Rubby De La Rosa, RHP: Una vez considerado como uno de los mejores prospectos de lanzamiento del juego, De La Rosa, de 31 años, tuvo una carrera decente con los Medias Rojas y D-backs desde 2014-17 antes de que las lesiones arruinaran su carrera. Hizo su debut en NPB con los Gigantes el año pasado, lanzando a una efectividad de 2.25 con una relación K / BB de 32 a 5 en 24 entradas. Angel Sanchez, RHP: Los fanáticos de los Piratas están excusados ​​si no recuerdan la breve taza de café de 12 entradas de Sánchez de la temporada 2017. Sánchez, que ahora tiene 30 años, tuvo un 2015 muy prometedor entre Doble-A y Triple-A antes de que su temporada 2016 se perdiera por la cirugía de Tommy John. Ha pasado los últimos dos años con SK Wyverns de KBO, incluida una impresionante efectividad de 2.62 con 8.1 K / 9 contra 2.3 BB / 9 en 165 entradas en 2019. Thyago Vieira, RHP: Vieira, de 26 años, era un prospecto intrigante con los Marineros y los Medias Blancas debido a su enorme velocidad de bola rápida, pero fue golpeado con fuerza en 25 cuadros de 2/3 MLB y en los menores superiores. Esta será su primera temporada en Japón. Yokohama DeNA BayStars (71-69-3): José López, 1B: Sí, es ese José López. Un jugador de segunda base All-Star con los Marineros en 2006, López ahora tiene 36 años y es un veterano de siete años en NPB. En dos temporadas con los Gigantes y cinco con los BayStars, es un bateador de .276 / .317 / .500 con 186 jonrones. Spencer Patton, RHP: El jugador de 32 años no ha lanzado en las grandes ligas desde 2016 y tiene solo una efectividad de 6.26 en 54 cuadros entre los Rangers y los Cachorros. Pero Patton se ha hecho un nombre con los BayStars, para quienes lanzó una efectividad combinada de 2.64 en 116 entradas de 2017-18. Tuvo un mal año en 19 y buscará una mejor salud y mejores resultados en 2020. Edwin Escobar, LHP: con solo 28 años, Escobar no ha lanzado en las Grandes Ligas desde un cameo de 2016 con los D-backs. Eso se debe en gran parte al éxito que ha encontrado en Japón, donde ha registrado una efectividad de 3.36 con 9.5 K / 9 y 3.4 BB / 9 en tres temporadas fuera del bullpen de BayStars. Tyler Austin, OF: Austin ha demostrado mucho poder en partes de cuatro temporadas de la MLB, pero sus ponches lo han limitado a una línea de bateo general de .219 / .292 / .451. El ex prospecto de los Yankees se adaptará por primera vez en NPB esta temporada. Neftali Soto, INF / OF: Soto, de 31 años, vio todas las 44 apariciones en el plato de la MLB con los Rojos en 2013-14, pero fue golpeado como una estrella en Japón. En dos temporadas con el club de Yokohama, ha bateado .288 / .355 / .594 con 84 jonrones en 1043 apariciones en el plato. Será un agente libre el próximo año y podría atraer algunos intereses de MLB. Hanshin Tigers (69-68-6): Kyuji Fujikawa, RHP: Fujikawa, ahora de 39 años, nunca despegó después de firmar con los Cachorros para la temporada 2013. Regresó a NPB en 2016 y ha recuperado su estatus de relevista de alto nivel con su club original, los Tigres. Fujikawa olfateó 83 bateadores y registró una efectividad de 1.77 en 56 entradas el año pasado. Kosuke Fukudome, OF: Otro ex cachorro, Fukudome todavía está tomando el pelo a los 43 años. Bateó .256 / .347 / .394 en 403 apariciones en el plato con los Tigres la temporada pasada, su 16º en NPB. Justin Bour, 1B / DH: Bour lanzó 92 jonrones en una carrera de seis años con los Marlins, los Filis y los Angelinos, pero nunca bateó mucho al salir de Miami. Su poder debería jugar bien en su debut en la NPB este año, y con suerte su apodo "Bourtobello Crushroom" atrapa allí (a pesar de que Bour le dijo a Sports Illustrated que nunca ha sido llamado por ese apodo, todavía aparece en su página de Baseball-Reference). Jon Edwards, RHP: Edwards, de 32 años, ha visto el tiempo de MLB con los Rangers, Indios y Padres, pero nunca se consolidó como un contribuyente constante. Sin embargo, cuenta con una efectividad de 3.08 y 12.4 K / 9 en partes de cuatro temporadas Triple-A. Este será su debut en NPB. Onelki García, RHP: García, de 30 años, tiene solo 7 1/3 entradas de la MLB a su nombre y regresará a los Tigres para una segunda temporada después de tener una efectividad de 4.69 en 103 cuadros de 2/3 el año pasado. Publicó una fuerte marca de 2.99 con los Dragones Chunichi en 2018. Jefry Marte, 1B / 3B: Marte nunca encontró su ritmo en partes de cuatro temporadas con los Tigres o los Angelinos de 2015-18, pero publicó un corte de .284 / .381 / .444 en su esfuerzo de debut con Hanshin la temporada pasada. Jerry Sands, OF: The Sands, de 32 años, tuvo una carrera profesional en los EE. UU., Pero alcanzó el nivel de estrella en la Organización de Béisbol de Corea en las últimas dos temporadas: .306 / .391 / .574. Firmó con Hanshin este invierno y hará su debut en NPB. Carpa Hiroshima Toyo (70-70-3): Kris Johnson, LHP: Johnson, de 35 años, apenas pudo ver a los Piratas o los Mellizos, pero ha sido uno de los mejores lanzadores de Japón en la última media década. En cinco temporadas, todas con la Carpa, tiene una efectividad combinada de 2.54 con promedios de siete ponches y tres bases por cada nueve entradas. DJ Johnson, RHP: Esta será la primera temporada de NPB para Johnson, quien registró una efectividad de 4.88 en 31 2/3 entradas con los Rockies en las últimas dos temporadas. Como jugador no reclutado que también ha pasado tiempo en el circuito independiente, Johnson, de 30 años, está cultivando una carrera única en el béisbol. Tayler Scott, RHP: El segundo jugador nacido en Sudáfrica que llegó a las grandes ligas, Gift Ngoepe fue el primero, Scott fue golpeado fuertemente en 16 1/3 cuadros entre los Marineros y los Orioles el año pasado. Sin embargo, el jugador de 28 años también lanzó 16 cuadros con solo una carrera permitida y una relación K / BB de 21 a 3 con el club Triple-A de los Orioles en '19. José Pirela, OF: Pirela golpeó bien en media temporada con los Padres en 2017, pero ha tenido problemas en las Grandes Ligas fuera de esa carrera. Nunca pudo ganar el concierto de segunda base en San Diego y se perdió en la confusión de su abarrotada mezcla de campo. Pirela trae una carrera de .257 / .308 / .392 MLB a su temporada de debut en Japón, pero es un bateador de .311 / .362 / .493 en Triple-A. Dragones Chunichi (68-73-2): Dayan Viciedo, 1B: Los fanáticos de los Medias Blancas seguramente recordarán "The Tank" de su tramo 2010-14 con los South Siders, pero nunca se convirtió en la estrella que esperaban poder. Vicideo bateó .254 / .298 / .424 justo antes de las 1800 apariciones en el plato de la MLB, pero es un bateador de .303 / .372 / .502 en cuatro temporadas como Dragón. Moisés Sierra, OF: Hablando de los ex jardineros de los Medias Blancas, la carrera de Sierra con el ChiSox fue mucho más breve que la de Viciedo. Jugó 83 partidos allí y 207 en total en las grandes ligas de 2012-18, alcanzando .235 / .287 / .362 en el proceso. Sierra registró cifras escandalosas en la Liga Mexicana el año pasado (.355 / .464 / .572) y hará su debut en el NPB en 2020. Enny Romero, LHP: Romero lanzó bastante bien para los Nats 2017, pero por lo demás ha tenido problemas en las Grandes Ligas. Pasó la mayor parte de la temporada pasada en la rotación de los Dragones, lanzando a una efectividad de 4.26 a través de 116 1/3 cuadros. Zoilo Almonte, OF: El jugador de 30 años de edad, Almonte, nunca se dio cuenta de los Yankees a pesar de una larga mirada en su sistema de granja, pero rompió con el club Chunichi en NPB. En dos temporadas anteriores, Almonte es un bateador de .323 / .372 / .491. Golondrinas de Tokio Yakult (59-82-2): Nori Aoki, OF: Aoki puede tener 38 años, pero sigue siendo un bateador productivo. En 565 apariciones en el plato con Swallows en 2019, bateó .297 / .385 / .442 con 16 bolas largas. Eso es más poder del que mostró en la MLB, pero su carrera de seis años en las Grandes Ligas aún era bastante sólida: .285 / .350 / .387, 10.5 WAR. Alcides Escobar, SS: el ex compañero de equipo de los Reales de Aoki se unirá a él para su primera campaña NPB una vez que el juego se reanude en dos semanas. El bate de Escobar, de 33 años, se redujo drásticamente en sus últimas temporadas de Grandes Ligas, pero es un ex All-Star, ganador del Guante de Oro y campeón de la Serie Mundial. Gabriel Ynoa, RHP: Un granjero de los Mets desde hace mucho tiempo, Ynoa, de 27 años, nunca tuvo mucho éxito en las Grandes Ligas (efectividad de 5.39 en 163 2/3 entradas). Ynoa absorbió 110 entradas para un desastroso equipo de lanzadores de los Orioles en 2019, pero esperará tener un mayor impacto en su debut en el NPB. Matt Koch, RHP: Koch, de 29 años, nunca encontró su equilibrio en cuatro años con los D-backs o incluso en Triple-A, pero lanzó bien en el nivel de Doble-A en su carrera. Scott McGough, RHP: McGough, de 30 años, tiene solo 6 2/3 entradas en las Grandes Ligas, todos con los Marlins de 2015, pero estuvo listo para Yakult en 2019, lanzando a una efectividad de 3.15 con casi un ponche por cuadro en 68 2/3 entradas de alivio. Albert Suárez, RHP: Una vez que los Gigantes eligieron la Regla 5, Suárez también vio algo de tiempo con el club Yakult la temporada pasada, registrando una efectividad de 1.54 en 17 cuadros 2/3. También pasó tiempo con su club de ligas menores, pero esperará establecerse aún más en 2020. Ryota Igarashi, RHP: El tiempo de 41 años de Igarashi con los Mets, Yankees y Blue Jays en 2010-12 fue feo, pero ha sido una presencia constantemente fuerte en el bullpen en las increíbles 17 temporadas de NPB. La efectividad de 2.98 del año pasado en 42 cuadros de 1/3 fue casi similar con su marca de 2.93 en su carrera, aunque su marca de 5.1 BB / 9 fue una señal de alerta.
Albert Suárez Alcides Escobar Angel Sánchez Dayan Viciedo DJ Johnson Edwin Escobar Enny Romero Gabriel Ynoa Gerardo Parra Hanshin Tigres Hisashi Iwakuma Jefry Marte Jerry Sands Jon Edwards José López José Pirela Justin Bour Kosuke Fukudome Kris Johnson Kyuji Fujikawa Matt Koch MLBTR Originales Moises Sierra Nenelki Soto Rubby De La Rosa Ryota Igarashi Scott McGough Spencer Patton Tayler Scott Thyago Vieira Tyler Austin Zoilo Almonte1 comentario
from Noticias Wincatchers https://noticias.wincatchers.com/2020/06/05/ex-jugadores-de-mlb-en-npb-liga-central-de-japon/
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goalhofer · 5 years ago
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2020 Yomiuri Kyojin Roster
Pitchers
#12 Rubby De La Rosa (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)
#13 Togo Shosei (Miyakonojo, Japan)
#15 Sawamura Hirokazu (Tochigi, Japan)
#17 Otake Kan (Yashio, Japan)
#18 Sugano Tomoyuki (Kanagawa, Japan)
#20 Angel Sanchez (Salcedo, Dominican Republic)
#23 Hirotaka Yonahara (Tokyo, Japan)
#26 Takahashi Yuki (Hitachinaka, Japan)
#28 Taguchi Kazuto (Hiroshima, Japan)
#30 Kagiya Yohei (Nanae, Japan)
#31 Hatake Seishu (Kure, Japan)
#35 Sakurai Toshiki (Kobe, Japan)
#40 Furukawa Yuri (Takeo, Japan)
#41 Nakagawa Kota (Tondabayashi, Japan)
#42 C.C. Mercedes (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)
#45 Imamura Nobutaka (Shijonowate, Japan)
#46 Takuya Kuwahara (Tokyo, Japan)
#49 Thyago Vieira (Sao Paulo, Brazil)
#53 Hosei Takata (Tokyo, Japan)
#57 Takagi Kyosuke (Nomi, Japan)
Catchers
#22 Seiji Kobayashi (Tokyo, Japan)
#24 Ohshiro Takumi (Naha, Japan)
#27 Sumitani Ginjiro (Kyoto, Japan)
#38 Yukinori Kishida (Tokyo, Japan)
Infielders
#1 Hayato Hirama (Tokyo, Japan)
#3 Nakajima Hiroyuki (Itami, Japan)
#6 Sakamoto Hayato (Itami, Japan)
#21 Hibiki Kuroda (Tokyo, Japan)
#25 Okamoto Kazuma (Gojo, Japan)
#29 Yoshikawa Naoki (Hashima, Japan)
#37 Akihiro Wakabayashi (Tokyo, Japan)
#51 Tanaka Shunta (Kanagawa, Japan)
#52 Katumi Kitamura (Tokyo, Japan)
#56 Yasuhiro Yamamoto (Tokyo, Japan)
Outfielders
#2 Dai-Kang Yang (Taitung, Taiwan)
#8 Maru Yoshihiro (Katsuura, Japan)
#9 Kamei Yoshiyuki (Yamatokoriyama, Japan)
#10 Takamaru Yaoita (Tokyo, Japan)
#36 Ishikawa Shingo (Sakai, Japan)
#43 Shigenobu Shinnosuke (Sakura, Japan)
#59 Seiya Matsubara (Tokyo, Japan)
#88 Gerardo Parra (Santa Barbara Del Zulia, Venezuela)
#94 Shuhei Kato (Tokyo, Japan)
Coaches
Manager Hara Tatsunori (Sagimihara, Japan)
Bench coach Motoki Daisuke (Toyonaka, Japan)
Position player coach Goto Koji (Ichinomiya, Japan)
Assistant position player coach Ishii Takuro (Sano, Japan)
Pitching coach Miyamoto Kazutomo (Shimonoseki, Japan)
Assistant pitching coach Misawa Koichi (Saitama, Japan)
Bullpen coach Murata Yoshinori (Sasebo, Japan)
Infield coach Furuki Shigeyuki (Kashiwa, Japan)
Hitting coach Aikawa Ryoji (Ichikawa Ichi, Japan)
Strategy coach Yoshimura Sadaaki (Gose, Japan)
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fractaldunes · 3 years ago
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Wade Allen Miley (born November 13, 1986) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Chicago Cubs of Major League Baseball (MLB). The Arizona Diamondbacks selected Miley in the first round of the 2008 MLB draft. He made his MLB debut with the Diamondbacks in 2011, and has also played for the Boston Red Sox, Seattle Mariners, Baltimore Orioles, Milwaukee Brewers, Houston Astros and Cincinnati Reds. He played college baseball at Southeastern Louisiana University. On May 7, 2021, he threw a no-hitter against the Cleveland Indians.
Miley was born in Hammond, Louisiana, but grew up in Loranger, a town of 6,100 residents and 1,924 households. His father, Wendell, was a mechanic for 18 wheelers.[1] Miley attended Loranger High School and Southeastern Louisiana University, where he played college baseball for the Southeastern Louisiana Lions baseball team.[2] In 2007, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Wareham Gatemen of the Cape Cod Baseball League.[3][4]
The Arizona Diamondbacks selected Miley in the first round, 43rd overall, of the 2008 Major League Baseball draft.[5] He made his debut professionally with the Yakima Bears of the Class A-Short Season Northwest League. Miley was called up to the majors for the first time on August 15, 2011,[6] and would finish the season with a 4–2 record in eight games (seven starts).
Miley was named the National League (NL) Rookie of the Month for April 2012, pitching 3–0 with a 1.29 earned-run average (ERA), striking out 15 in 21 innings in two starts. Miley took a no-hitter into the 6th inning against Miami. He was also named a NL All-Star in his rookie season after beginning the 2012 season with a 9–5 record with a 3.04 ERA.[7] Later that season on October 1, 2012, Miley pitched an immaculate inning in a game facing the Colorado Rockies. Miley won 16 games for the Diamondbacks in 29 starts in 2012. He also made 3 relief appearances. He had an ERA of 3.33 in 194+2⁄3 innings.[8]
Miley lost to Bryce Harper for the National League Rookie of the Year in 2012.[9]
On April 22, 2013, Miley hit his first career home run. Miley took a step back from his strong rookie season, managing just 10 wins despite pitching over 200 innings. In 2014, Miley would pitch to a 4.34 ERA with 183 strikeouts and a win-loss record of 8–12.[10]
On December 12, 2014, the Diamondbacks traded Miley to the Boston Red Sox in exchange for pitchers Rubby De La Rosa and Allen Webster and infielder Raymel Flores.[11] On February 5, 2015, Miley and the Red Sox agreed on a three-year $19.25 million contract extension.[12] On April 21, 2015, Miley won his first game with the Red Sox, throwing 5+2⁄3 shutout innings versus the Tampa Bay Rays.[citation needed][13] For the season, Miley pitched to a 4.46 ERA in 32 starts, compiling an 11–11 record.
On December 7, 2015, the Red Sox traded Miley and Jonathan Aro to the Seattle Mariners for Roenis Elías and Carson Smith.[14] Miley struggled during his stint with Seattle, pitching to a 4.98 ERA and a 7–8 record. In his last start for the team, he pitched seven scoreless innings against the Cubs.
On July 31, 2016, the Mariners traded Miley to the Baltimore Orioles for Ariel Miranda.[15] In August, he made six starts, pitching to a 7.14 ERA in 29 innings and had a 1–3 record. The Orioles went 2–4 in his starts. On September 18, Miley pitched four scoreless innings against the Tampa Bay Rays, before being pulled with a back injury. He returned his next start, taking a shutout into the 9th inning against his former team the Diamondbacks. He ended pitching 82⁄3 innings before allowing an RBI double. He struck out a career-high 11 batters in his best start in an Orioles uniform. Overall, Miley finished 2–5 in 11 starts with an ERA of 6.17 for Baltimore. The following season, Miley was tabbed as the #4 starter in the rotation. He endured his worst season of his career, setting career worsts in ERA for a full season (5.61), losses (15), home runs allowed (25) and walks (93). He also pitched in a career low 157+1⁄3 innings pitched. On July 30, 2017, Miley gave up Adrián Beltré's 3,000th career hit. On November 3, 2017, the Orioles declined Miley's 2018 option.[16]
On February 14, 2018, Miley signed a minor league deal with the Milwaukee Brewers.[17] He began the season in the Minors but was called up a couple of weeks later. He pitched in two starts before landing on the 60 day disabled list with an oblique injury. He was activated off the disabled list on July 12, going 5–2 with a 2.57 ERA in 16 starts. He also started Game 3 of the Division Series, along with Games 2, 5 and 6 of the NLCS. In Game 5 he faced only one hitter before being replaced with a right-handed pitcher. This made Miley only the second starter in postseason history to face a single batter and the first to do so without getting the batter out.[18] By starting Game 6 he became the first pitcher in 88 years to start back-to-back postseason games.[19]
Miley signed a one-year contract worth $4.5 million with the Houston Astros on February 1, 2019.[20] In 2019 he was 14–6 with a 3.98 ERA in 167+1⁄3 innings over 33 starts.[21]
On December 18, 2019, Miley signed a two-year contract, with a club option, worth $15 million with the Cincinnati Reds.[22] In a COVID-19 shortened season, Miley was 0–3 with a 5.65 ERA in 14+1⁄3 over 6 games (4 starts).[21]
On May 7, 2021, Miley threw the 17th no-hitter in Reds history, striking out eight batters while allowing only two baserunners in the 3–0 win against the Cleveland Indians. It was the fourth no-hitter of the season and the second in three days after John Means of the Baltimore Orioles threw his against the Seattle Mariners.[23] Miley finished the 2021 season with a 12–7 record and 3.37 ERA in 28 starts.
On November 5, 2021, the Reds placed Miley on waivers and he was claimed by the Chicago Cubs.[24]
Genuinely thought the bottom post was a continuation of the top one
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smh25 · 5 years ago
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【朗報】ルビーデラロサ 157キロ!一回無失点でデビュー!
【巨人】デラロサ、衝撃の157キロデビュー! – スポーツ報知 巨人のルビー・デラロサ投手(30)=ダイヤモンドバックス傘下3Aリノ=が衝撃の1軍デビューを果たした。 (出典:スポーツ報知) ルビー・デラロサ ルビー・カルロス・デ・ラ・ロサ・コーポラン(Rubby Carlos De La Rosa Corporan , 1989年5月4日 – )は、ドミニカ共和国・サントドミンゴ出身のプロ野球選手(投手)。右投右打。読売ジャイアンツ所属。 2007年、ロサンゼルス・ドジャースと契約。 12キロバイト (1,043 語) – 2019年7月16日 (火) 00:39 (出典…
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niccongo0-blog · 6 years ago
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Cubs 7, Diamondbacks 1: The Tyler Chatwood evidence
SCOTTSDALE, Arizona — Once again, Tyler Chatwood threw in relief. Once again, he threw very, very well. Five batters faced, five batters retired, no walks.
Hey, I am not a sports psychologist, nor even a sports mental skills person. But there seems to be some issue with Chatwood, the starter, where... I don’t know, maybe he just overthinks what he has to do on the mound, as opposed to when he enters the game in the middle, when he just uses his good stuff — again, hitting the mid 90s with his fastball — and can get outs.
Numbers, just so you have them:
Chatwood the starter: two games, 3⅓ innings, four hits, four walks, one hit batter, two strikeouts, six runs (four earned), one HR, 10.80 ERA Chatwood the reliever: four games, 7⅔ innings, six hits, no walks, five strikeouts, no runs, 0.00 ERA
Granted, the spring training outings are very, very small sample sizes. But the difference between Chatwood the starter and Chatwood the reliever this spring have been like two different pitchers. I like the reliever much, much better. As of right now, with some potential injuries limiting some relievers who could be on the Opening Day roster, Chatwood’s probably going to be in the Opening Day bullpen. And you know what? I think he might just do pretty well.
In other news from Saturday’s game, the Cubs beat the Diamondbacks 7-1 in front of the largest crowd ever at the D-backs spring home of Salt River Fields, 14,035. About two-thirds of those were Cubs fans on what was probably the nicest day so far this spring, 77 degrees and unlimited sunshine.
Kyle Hendricks wasn’t too sharp; he issued a pair of walks and allowed five hits, several on hard contact. The D-backs scored a run in the first and might have had more, but Hendricks induced a double-play ball to end the inning.
The Cubs broke through with three runs in the fourth, two of them on this Anthony Rizzo double ripped down the right-field line:
In the fifth, David Bote stepped to the plate with one out [VIDEO].
Your browser does not support HTML5 video.
Bote’s opposite-field smash, his second of thee spring, made it 4-1 and then the Cubs teed off on Rubby De La Rosa and a couple of D-backs minor leaguers for three more in the sixth. Ian Happ and Bote had RBI singles.
Mike Montgomery made his second appearance of the spring, and allowed a single and a walk to the first two batters he faced, but then retired five straight before a two-out double in the seventh. One of the outs was on a nice catch of a sharp line drive hit by former Cub Matt Szczur by Javier Baez, and I wish I could show you another play Baez made, but there’s no video available. In the fifth, Ketel Marte hit a line drive that glanced off Kris Bryant’s glove, but Baez caught it before it hit the ground for a rare 5-6 putout.
After that it was all minor leaguers, except for Allen Webster, who threw a scoreless eighth. Webster hit 96-97 on the SRF video board, and he also has a chance to make the Opening Day bullpen.
Sunday, the Cubs return to Sloan Park to face the Rockies. Jose Quintana will start for the Cubs and Chad Bettis goes for the Rockies. Game time is 3:05 p.m. CT and there will be TV coverage via NBC Sports Chicago as well as an audio webcast on cubs.com.
Source: https://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2019/3/16/18269066/cubs-diamondbacks-recap-tyler-chatwood-david-bote-mlb-scores
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underthecapblog · 6 years ago
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August 25, 2012 - The Boston Red Sox trade Adrian Gonzalez, Carl Crawford, Josh Beckett and Nick Punto to the Los Angeles Dodgers for James Loney for Jerry Sands, Rubby De La Rosa and  Allen Webster. The landmark trade bailed the Red Sox organization out of undesirable long-term contracts that had been signed the prior offseason and paved the way to the team’s 2013 championship. The move was especially surprising, occurring after the traditional non-waiver trade deadline, and involved contracts that many around the league viewed as unmovable.
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akoetoako · 7 years ago
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Diamondbacks promote P Silvino Bracho, SS Kris Negron from Triple-A; release P Rubby De La Rosa (ESPN)
from ESPN http://espn.go.com/mlb/ via IFTTT
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goalhofer · 7 years ago
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Top 10 Player Jersey #s By Sport On Google: #62
Hockey: Carl Hagelin (Pittsburgh Penguins), Kevin Labanc (San Jose Sharks), Denis Malgin (Florida Panthers), Thomas Vanek (Detroit Red Wings), Eric Gryba (Edmonton Oilers), Andrej Sustr (Tampa Bay Lightning), Artturi Lehkonen (Montreal Canadiens), Eric Gryba (Ottawa Senators), Andrej Sustr (Czech Republic) & Mario Bliznak (Vancouver Canucks).
Baseball: Jose Quintana (Chicago Cubs), Alberto Cabrera (Chicago Cubs), Sean Doolittle (Washington Nationals), Zac Curtis (Arizona Diamondbacks), Rubby De La Rosa (Boston Red Sox), Vin Scully (Los Angeles Dodgers), Sean Doolittle (Oakland Athletics), Brady Rodgers (Houston Astros), Al Alburquerque (Detroit Tigers) & Nick Greenwood (St. Louis Cardinals).
Basketball: None
Football: Le'Raven Clark (Indianapolis Colts), Jason Kelce (Philadelphia Eagles), Vladimir Ducasse (New York Jets), Nick Easton (Minnesota Vikings), Michal Menet (Pennsylvania State University Nittany Lions), Khaled Holmes (Indianapolis Colts), Joe Thuney (New England Patriots), Jacob Clark (Oklahoma State University Cowboys), Drew Nowak (Seattle Seahawks), Mike Devlin (Buffalo Bills) & Casey Wiegmann (Kansas City Chiefs).
Soccer: Lorenzo Tonelli (S.S.C. Napoli).
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smh25 · 5 years ago
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【ルビー・デラロサ】巨人 緊急補強へ!
巨人にデラロサ保有権売却へ「日本の方が高年俸か」 – 日刊スポーツ 巨人が獲得調査を進めるダイヤモンドバックス傘下3Aのルビー・デラロサ投手(30)が、巨人に保有権を売却される見通しだと20日(日本時間21日)、地元紙アリゾナ… (出典:日刊スポーツ) ルビー・デラロサルビー・カルロス・デ・ラ・ロサ・コーポラン(Rubby Carlos De La Rosa Corporan , 1989年5月4日 – )は、ドミニカ共和国・サントドミンゴ出身のプロ野球選手(投手)。右投右打。読売ジャイアンツ所属。 2007年、ロサンゼルス・ドジャースと契約。 11キロバイト (918 語) – 2019年6月21日 (金)…
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junker-town · 7 years ago
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It’s been 5 years since the Red Sox trade that changed everything
A quarter-billion dollars and Nick Punto headed west, changing the direction of the Red Sox for years to come.
The 2012 Red Sox were an absolute disaster. They never quite escaped the event horizon of 2011’s collapsed season, and likely definitely only made things worse by swapping beloved manager Terry Francona for walking disaster, Bobby Valentine.
On August 25, though, everything changed. The Red Sox completed a deal with the Dodgers that would shape the direction of both franchises for years to come. The Dodgers wanted Red Sox first baseman Adrian Gonzalez, and had for months and months — Boston wasn’t interested in dealing him during the offseason when Los Angeles first asked about the possibility, but when the Sox season fell apart and continued to fall, their response changed.
It helped, too, that the Dodgers seemingly said yes to every single thing the Red Sox required of them in order to acquire Gonzalez. Boston didn’t just send Gonzalez and his comparatively team-friendly contract to the Dodgers: the remaining five years of Carl Crawford and his deal went with, as did Josh Beckett and what was left of the extension he had signed a few years before when Theo Epstein still called the shots for the Sox.
The Dodgers also acquired Nick Punto in this trade, which seemed a little odd at the time: one of the game’s top first basemen on a contract the Dodgers wanted to possess, coupled with a former ace and a former star who had both fallen on hard times... and also a bench player who hadn’t hit even a little bit in his first year with the Red Sox, and was only owed a little over $300,000 for the rest of the season.
Photo by Darren McCollester/Getty Images
The inclusion of Punto actually underscores how important this deal was for the Red Sox, and why a change of direction this serious was necessary for them. Moving Punto and the $327,000 left on his 2012 contract enabled the Red Sox to get under the luxury tax for the season: they only finished the year $47,177 under the $178 million luxury tax threshold, and they never would have gotten there if the Dodgers had refused to take on Punto’s contract in addition to the other quarter-billion dollars that Gonzalez, Crawford, and Beckett represented.
Getting under the tax threshold was key, as the repeat-offender Red Sox were in line to pay a 40 percent tax on the dollars over the limit. Instead, they were able to turn the lost cause of 2012 into the year in which they got themselves under the threshold and reset the penalty to a much more manageable 17.5 percent.
That little bit of budget space might not sound like much, but if you remember how the Red Sox had to operate during Ben Cherington’s first offseason as the general manager, everything becomes more clear. Epstein had left for the Cubs after 2011, and what he left behind in Boston was a promising core with no room to spend. To replace free agent Jonathan Papelbon, the Red Sox had trade Josh Reddick to the A’s for closer Andrew Bailey. Aaron Cook, who was recovering from an injury and also was Aaron Cook, was the starting depth there was room for in the budget. Boston gave Daniel Bard a try in the rotation because Bard wanted it, but also because that was something they could do within the confines of their budget.
Getting rid of Gonzalez isn’t something the Red Sox necessarily wanted to do — the Dodgers were willing to take on the rest of those dollars and players for a reason. However, packaging Gonzalez’s remaining $130 million with the injured Carl Crawford, who was still owed another $85 million after 2012, and Beckett’s $31.5 million over the next two years — in conjunction with the luxury tax miracle of Nick Punto’s deal — made it so Ben Cherington had room to build his own Red Sox team instead of just working at the margins of the one he inherited.
That club included Mike Napoli, Koji Uehara, Stephen Drew, Ryan Dempster, David Ross, and Shane Victorino. The extra budget space meant the Red Sox could acquire Jake Peavy at the 2013 trade deadline, rather than like in 2011 where their budget limited them to whichever of Erik Bedard or Rich Harden had a working throwing arm on July 31. (The answer, as it turns out, was “neither.”) All of these transactions led Boston to a World Series in 2013, just a year after what myself and others around these parts affectionally refer to as the Nick Punto Trade.
All of that, by the way, is why you’re more than halfway through this piece and haven’t even seen a mention of what players the Red Sox got back from the Dodgers in this deal. That’s because none of them ended up mattering much at all outside of being lottery tickets (Rubby De La Rosa and Allen Webster, both eventually traded for Wade Miley) or a way to make sure that the math checked out and Boston was going to be able to get under the luxury tax.
The influence of the Punto deal wasn’t limited to just 2013. Being able to once again spend money meant that Cherington and the Red Sox could hold on to their prospects rather than deal them to fill every hole. When you see the 2017 roster includes Jackie Bradley Jr., Mookie Betts, Christian Vazquez, and Xander Bogaerts, you can understand why that matters. And it also gave Dave Dombrowski a surplus to trade from, which is how the Red Sox ended up promoting a ton of prospects to the majors while also being able to spend them to acquire the likes of Craig Kimbrel and Chris Sale... while still being able to promote the likes of Andrew Benintendi and Rafael Devers to Boston in the process.
The money saved by dealing Crawford and Gonzalez also has helped out in what are the later years of their deals: Crawford is still getting paid by the Dodgers even though he’s been released, and Gonzalez lost his job while injured in a season in which he disappointed while on the field. Meanwhile, the Red Sox added David Price to the rotation a year ago because they had the budget to wait for a major free agent, and have been flirting with staying under the luxury tax in spite of all the major additions, anyway.
Even acquiring Sale might have been something that only went down the way it did because of the 2012 trade: the Red Sox had the money available to them to spend heavily on Cuban free agent Yoan Moncada in 2015, giving him a $31.5 million bonus that also incurred a $31.5 million penalty to be paid to MLB. Moncada ended up being the key piece in the Sale deal, which left Rafael Devers alone to develop in Boston’s system instead of becoming the newest major White Sox prospect. And now Devers is the Red Sox third baseman at just 20 years old, and one of the major reasons it’s becoming easier to forget that Cherington and the Red Sox didn’t always spend the savings of 2012 well. That’s a Pablo Sandoval reference, if you’re keeping score.
Now, that’s not to say the Red Sox definitely would have not signed Moncada without the Punto trade happening, but it’s not hard to believe that’s the case. Again, consider that, with the Red Sox sporting a historic offense in 2011 and looking like they were on their way to a successful postseason run, all the owners would spring for financially on a team that needed pitching was Bedard or Harden. The next winter, despite a fan base and team looking to forget the horrific collapse of September 2011, the budget didn’t have room in it for anything that couldn’t be acquired for as little as possible on free agency or by way of trade. So, no, it’s not a stretch to try to connect these dots.
The mega-trade between the Red Sox and Dodgers had an immediate impact on Boston, with the team winning the World Series it felt like the dealt core was supposed to bring them in one of the two years before. While it’s maybe not as significant as it once was, tremors can still be felt from its impact on today’s Red Sox. It’s the deal that changed everything, one that happened because of the Dodgers and their new owners’ need to be recognized, and because someone in Boston was smart enough to ask if Los Angeles had ever thought about a Nick Punto of their very own.
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thelockaroom-blog · 7 years ago
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Rubby De La Rosa to have second Tommy John surgery #Baseball
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