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twins2994 · 29 days
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St. Louis Cardinals-Minnesota Twins Series Preview
8.23.24-Andre Pallante RHP (5-6) 4.07 ERA Vs. David Festa RHP (2-2) 4.96 ERA
8.24.24-Sonny Gray RHP (11-8) 3.91 ERA Vs. Pablo Lopez RHP (11-8) 4.47 ERA
8.25.24-Erick Fedde RHP (8-7) 3.39 ERA Vs. Zebby Matthews RHP (1-1) 3.60 ERA
The Cardinals At A Glance- The Cardinals have clung to the .500 mark seemingly all season long. They are sliding a bit with a (7-12) record in August and sit five games out of the last Wild-Card spot. St. Louis is in a weird spot because they have so many veterans. Paul Goldschmidt will be a free agent at the end of the season and they signed Lance Lynn, Kyle Gibson, and Sonny Gray before this season. Alec Burleson is having a breakout season with twenty-one homers and seventy RBI. Masyn Winn in the new shortstop with a .278 average. Paul Goldchmidt and Nolan Gorman have nineteen homers each. Lance Lynn has a knee issue and threw live batting practice on Monday. Steven Matz is slowly working his way back from a back injury. The Cardinals starting staff has a 4.50 ERA, which is 23rd in baseball. Kyle Gibson has been good with a 4.22 ERA, Sonny Gray has a 3.91 ERA, and Miles Mikolas has been knocked around a bit. Ryan Helsley has locked down thirty-nine saves. JoJo Romero has been good from the left side of the bullpen, while Andrew Kittredge and Shawn Armstrong have been good righty options.
The Twins At A Glance- The Twins had a solid road trip and went (4-3) in Arlington and San Diego. The team returns home for a huge nine-game homestand against decent teams. The Cardinals, Braves, and Blue Jays are good, but not great. Kody Funderburk has starting a throwing program and could begin a rehab assignment this weekend. Brooks Lee worked out in St. Paul on Thursday and might go on a rehab assignment. Alex Kirilloff was set to go on a rehab assignment then sprained his ankle doing drills. Carlos Correa is still having issues with his heel. Byron Buxton could be close to returning this weekend. Christian Vazquez is hitting .357 with three homers and eleven RBI since the break. Matt Wallner and Royce Lewis each have hit five homers since the All-Star Break. Griffin Jax owns a 1.38 ERA in his past thirteen innings. Cole Sands has been just as good with a 1.89 ERA over his last 13 2/3 innings.
What To Watch For- The Twins are (23-20) all-time against the Cardinals. The Twins took two of three from the Cardinals in St. Louis last August. The Cardinals haven't been to Target Field since 2020 for the Twins home opener in the shortened season. These two teams will open up next season in St. Louis. Andre Pallante has thrown one scoreless inning against the Twins in his career. Sonny Gray is (2-4) with a 5.05 ERA in eight starts against the Twins. He has a 2.83 ERA in 35 starts at Target Field. Pablo Lopez is (2-2) with a 2.84 ERA in five starts against the Cardinals. Erick Fedde is (1-0) with an 0.82 ERA in two starts against the Twins. David Festa and Zebby Matthews have never faced the Cardinals. It should be a nice weekend for a series against a reeling Cardinals team.
-Chris Kreibich-
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listingtrust · 2 years
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Red sox roster
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#Red sox roster professional#
#Red sox roster series#
#Red sox roster free#
Two weeks later, he found himself in Boston as part of the return for Andrew Benintendi (by way of the Royals and Khalil Lee). He went from the Blue Jays to the Mets as part of the Steven Matz trade. You might recognize Winckowski, who’s been quite the traveler this winter. No one from this group was on their 40-man roster. For Boston, catchers Roldani Baldwin and Austin Rei, and pitchers Seth Blair, Matt Carasiti, Raynel Espinal, Durbin Feltman, Franklin German, Zac Grotz, Kaleb Ort, Andrew Politi, Thaddeus Ward, and Josh Winckowski were re-assigned to minor league camp. There are unlikely to be many surprises from this early round of cuts. Chief Baseball Officer Chaim Bloom announced the assignment of 12 players to minor league camp. The Red Sox were one of a number of teams to make their first round of roster cuts today.
Projected Arbitration Salaries For 2022.
^ "Red Sox's Josh Winckowski: Demoted after rough start".
^ "Red Sox Roster & Staff – Transactions".
^ "Red Sox place starter Chris Sale on injured list".
"Here are the 2022 Futures Game rosters". "Red Sox Officially Call Up Chris Sale, Option Prospect Brayan Bello".
#Red sox roster series#
"Brayan Bello struggles in MLB debut as Red Sox lose, 7-1 Boston now 0-8 in series vs. "Brayan Bello promoted to Boston Red Sox, will pitch for Boston on Wednesday". "Brayan Bello, Boston Red Sox's top pitching prospect, promoted to WooSox after dominating at Double-A". "Cup of Coffee: Bello tosses no-no, Walter strikes out 10 in same doubleheader". "Five Red Sox prospects land Baseball America's latest top 100". "Here's where Red Sox Top 30 prospects are starting '22". "By playing it safe on 40-man decisions, Red Sox take their chances in upcoming Rule 5 draft".
^ "Red Sox announce winners of 2021 Minor League awards".
^ "Futures Game scouting reports for every club".
^ "Boston Red Sox prospect Brayan Bello strikes out 10 in dominant performance for Portland Brandon Howlett records 4 hits for Greenville".
^ "Red Sox prospect Brayan Bello's fastball has reached triple-digits".
^ "Red Sox Pitching Prospect Brayan Bello Opening Eyes Inside, Outside Organization".
^ a b "Brayan Bello Minor Leagues Statistics & History".
^ "Meet Brayan Bello, Red Sox Prospect with Pedro Martinez Changeup".
On August 4, he was placed on the injured list with a left groin strain. Bello was selected to the 2022 All-Star Futures Game but replaced on the roster due to his major-league promotion. He made another start on July 11, then was optioned back to Worcester. He made his major-league debut on July 6, starting against the Tampa Bay Rays at Fenway Park, taking the loss after allowing four runs on six hits in four innings. In his first nine games with Worcester, he posted a 6–2 record and a 2.81 ERA while striking out 72 batters in 51 + 1⁄ 3 innings. Bello was promoted to the Triple-A Worcester Red Sox on May 16. On May 5, Bello threw a seven-inning no-hitter in the second game of a doubleheader against the Reading Fightin Phils it was the fifth no-hitter in Sea Dog history. He was ranked 97th in the list of baseball's top 100 prospects by Baseball America. īello began the 2022 season with Portland. On November 19, in advance of the Rule 5 draft, the Red Sox added Bello to their 40-man roster. Bello made six starts for Greenville and 15 starts for Portland, going a combined 7–3 with 3.87 ERA while striking out 132 batters in 95 + 1⁄ 3 innings. He was selected to the mid-season All-Star Futures Game, and was named the Starting Pitcher of the Year within Boston's farm system at the end of the season. In 2020, due to the cancellation of the Minor League Baseball season because of COVID-19, he did not play professionally.īello started 2021 with Greenville before being promoted to the Double-A Portland Sea Dogs. In 2019, he played in Class A for the Greenville Drive, compiling a 5–10 win–loss record in 25 games, all starts, with a 5.43 earned run average (ERA) while striking out 119 batters in 117 + 2⁄ 3 innings pitched.
#Red sox roster professional#
He spent his first professional season in 2018 with the Dominican Summer League Red Sox and Gulf Coast League Red Sox.
#Red sox roster free#
Bello signed with the Boston Red Sox as an international free agent in July 2017.
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inter-sekt-blog · 5 years
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Click the link to join us for our July #ThirdFriday, featuring music by Earth, SHOGGOTH AMENTA , the premiere of "The Books of Leyba: Fire", also featuring The Art Of Dave MacDowell , RF Pangborn,Folkicide and many more! Exclusively at #RogueGallery Only at www.intersektart.com/rogue-gallery #MindOverMedia #InterSekt #Artists #Art #DigitalArtDistrict #InterSektArt #NWC #Subversive #Cerebral #Ubiquity#TheBooksOfLeyba #Fire #ArtRevolution #ArtEvolution #DigitalExhibit#Cinema #UndergroundFilm #Painting #EarthSeattle#FullUponHerBurningLips #Music #July2019 #Art2019#NewWorldCreative #AvantGarde #FavoriteWeekendHangouts
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stevenleematz · 5 years
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See the premiere of "The Books of Leyba: Fire" this #ThirdFriday Exclusively at #RogueGallery
Only at www.intersektart.com/rogue-gallery
#MindOverMedia #InterSekt #Artists #Art
#DigitalArtDistrict #InterSektArt #NWC #Subversive #Cerebral #Ubiquity #TheBooksOfLeyba #Fire #ArtRevolution #ArtEvolution #DigitalExhibit #Cinema #UndergroundFilm #Painting #StevenJohnsonLeyba #Coyotel #ARTWAR #StevenLeeMatz #July2019 #Art2019 #NewWorldCreative #AvantGarde
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toakatdot · 3 years
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Mets to Promote Yennsy Diaz
Mets to Promote Yennsy Diaz
According to Andy Martino, the Mets are about to promote right handed reliever Yennsy Diaz. The Mets got Diaz in the Steven Matz trade, along with Sean Reid-Foley and Josh Winkowski. Winkowski turned into Khalil Lee, which indirectly all the return players in the Matz trade, big leaguers. Diaz has been pitching well at Syracuse. Over 4 innings of work, Diaz allowed just 3 hits, no walks, while…
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maxwellyjordan · 6 years
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Friday round-up
Yesterday the Supreme Court released four decisions, including one in a high-profile case with significant implications for ecommerce. In South Dakota v. Wayfair, the justices voted 5-4 to overrule two prior cases that prohibited states from requiring out-of-state retailers who don’t have a store or warehouse in the state to collect tax on sales to state residents. Mark Walsh has this blog’s opinion analysis. Subscript has a graphic explainer for the decision. At Good Judgment, Ryan Adler notes that the outcome “was not a win” for forecasters. At NPR, Nina Totenberg reports that the ruling “reversed decades-old decisions that protected out-of-state vendors from sales tax obligations unless the vendor had a physical presence in the state” and that “date back to a time when mail-order sales were relatively small and online sales were all but nonexistent.” Additional coverage comes from Brent Kendall, Jess Bravin and Laura Stevens for The Wall Street Journal, Bill Mears at Fox News, Richard Wolf at USA Today, Robert Barnes for The Washington Post, Adam Liptak for The New York Times, Greg Stohr at Bloomberg, Pete Williams at NBC News, Lydia Wheeler and Naomi Jagoda at The Hill, Mark Walsh at Education Week’s School Law Blog, Bernie Becker and Josh Gerstein at Politico, Jon Chesto for the Boston Globe, Lawrence Hurley at Reuters, Tony Mauro and Marcia Coyle at The National Law Journal (subscription or registration required), and David Savage for the Los Angeles Times, who reports that “[t]he decision will inject billions of dollars into state coffers, but also increase prices for many online shoppers.” [Disclosure: Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys contribute to this blog in various capacities, is among the counsel to the petitioner in this case.]
At Dorf on Law, Michael Dorf maintains that “Justice Kennedy’s majority opinion inadequately responds to the key objection by Chief Justice Roberts” in dissent that a change in states’ ability to tax out-of-state retailers should come from Congress. Additional commentary comes from Lisa Soronen at the National Conference of State Legislatures Blog.
The court also held 7-2 in Lucia v. Securities and Exchange Commission, that SEC administrative law judges are “officers of the United States” within the meaning of the appointments clause, who have to be appointed by the president, a court or a department head. Ronald Mann analyzes the opinion for this blog. Subscript’s graphic explainer is here. For The Washington Post, Robert Barnes reports that “[i]t was not immediately clear how many other SEC rulings will require new hearings or how the decision will affect administrative law judges in other government departments.” Additional coverage comes from Adam Liptak for The New York Times, David Savage for the Los Angeles Times, Andrew Chung at Reuters, and Tony Mauro at The National Law Journal (subscription or registration required), who reports that the federal government had “urged the court to consider strengthening presidential power to remove as well as appoint key officers,” but the court “declined that invitation.” At Reason’s Volokh Conspiracy blog, Jonathan Adler notes the “unusual line-up[s]” in Lucia and Wayfair.
The justices held 8-1 in Pereira v. Sessions that a notice ordering a noncitizen to appear for deportation proceedings without specifying a time or place does not stop the clock on the noncitizen’s accrual of continuous presence in the U.S. [Disclosure: Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys contribute to this blog in various capacities, is among the counsel on an amicus brief in support of the petitioner in this case.] At The National Law Journal (subscription or registration required), Tony Mauro reports that in a brief concurrence, “Justice Anthony Kennedy sharply criticized the ‘Chevron’ doctrine, raising questions about the future of judicial deference to federal agencies, and adding to the buzz in Washington about whether he will stay or leave the court.” Additional coverage of Kennedy’s concurrence comes from Amanda Reilly at E&E News, who reports that “[t]he remarks by Kennedy, who is seen as the court’s moderate justice, could reinvigorate the debate over the doctrine’s future.” At Reason’s Hit & Run blog, Damon Root remarks that “[i]t’s a big deal when Justice Kennedy … signals his interest in revisiting such a contentious precedent,” and “[i]t might just mean that Chevron‘s days are numbered.” At Take Care, Joshua Matz warns that “[i]f Chevron is overruled, federal agencies will face a far more treacherous terrain when their actions and regulations are challenged in court” and “[c]ourts, in turn, will assume far greater control of the nation’s regulatory agenda.” At Reason’s Volokh Conspiracy blog, Jonathan Adler maintains that “[w]ere Chevron overturned, it would not mean open season on agency actions.”
The fourth opinion yesterday was in Wisconsin Central Ltd.v. United States, in which the court ruled 5-4 that stock options are not taxable compensation under the Railroad Retirement Tax Act. Daniel Hemel analyzes the opinion for this blog. Here is a graphic explainer from Subscript. Amy Lee Rosen covers the decision for Law360 (subscription required).Mark Walsh has a “view” from the courtroom of today’s opinion announcements for this blog.
The editorial board of The Washington Post weighs in on this week’s two partisan-gerrymandering cases, Gill v. Whitford and Benisek v. Lamone, both of which the justices sent back to the lower courts without reaching the merits, warning that “the justices cannot dodge responsibility forever.” Commentary on Whitford comes from Cullen Seltzer at SandsAnderson and Jessica Mason Pieklo at Rewire.News. At the Election Law Blog, Rick Hasen notes that supplemental briefs filed in the wake of Whitford may delay disposition of a cert petition in a North Carolina partisan-gerrymandering case. At The Inquirer, Jonathan Lai and Liz Navratil report that “Pennsylvania’s top two Republican lawmakers filed an appeal Thursday with the U.S. Supreme Court challenging a ruling that the state’s congressional boundaries constituted a partisan gerrymander.”
At Local 10 News, Bob Norman interviews Fane Lozman, whose First Amendment retaliatory-arrest suit the court revived this week in Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach. Scott Cosenza discusses the decision at Liberty Nation. Additional commentary comes from the editorial board of the Los Angeles Times.
At Slate, former State Department consular officer Christopher Richardson casts doubt on the validity of the visa-waiver process the government has relied to defend its position in Trump v. Hawaii, a challenge to the latest version of the Trump administration’s entry ban, calling the process “window dressing to mask the true intent of Trump’s Muslim ban.” At ThinkProgress, Ian Millhiser argues that this “is, at its heart, a case about whether America’s borders are a civil rights-free zone.”
Briefly:
The editorial board of the Los Angeles Times urges the justices to review Dassey v. Dittmann, a cert petition filed by one of the subjects of the Netflix documentary series “Making a Murderer,” which highlights “the widespread failure by lower courts to take seriously the Supreme Court’s teaching over the years that ‘juveniles and those with intellectual deficits are at particular risk of confessing involuntarily — and often falsely — under the strain of coercive police tactics.’” [Disclosure: Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys contribute to this blog in various capacities, is among the counsel to the petitioner in this case.]
At her eponymous blog, Amy Howe looks at who may be writing this term’s 10 remaining opinions.
At The Daily Wire, Jay Hobbs proclaims that “[i]t’s free speech or bust” in National Institute of Family and Life Advocates v. Becerra, a First Amendment challenge to a California law that requires crisis-pregnancy centers to disclose information about publicly funded family-planning services, including abortion.
At the Mississippi Business Journal, Ben Williams maintains that “[r]egardless of what Congress and the States do with sports gaming” after the court’s ruling in Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Association, in which the court struck down the federal law that bars states from legalizing sports betting, “the clear winner in this case is the Tenth Amendment.”
The Download highlights Apple v. Pepper, an antitrust suit against Apple brought by IPhone app purchasers that the court will consider next term.
At The George Washington Law Review’s On the Docket blog, Donald Clarke looks at Animal Science Products v. Hebei Welcome Pharmaceutical Co., in which the court held that courts are not bound to defer to a foreign government’s interpretations of its own law, finding the decision “consistent with international practice and very likely the practice of the Chinese government itself.”
We rely on our readers to send us links for our round-up.  If you have or know of a recent (published in the last two or three days) article, post, podcast, or op-ed relating to the Supreme Court that you’d like us to consider for inclusion in the round-up, please send it to roundup [at] scotusblog.com. Thank you!
The post Friday round-up appeared first on SCOTUSblog.
from Law http://www.scotusblog.com/2018/06/friday-round-up-424/ via http://www.rssmix.com/
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junker-town · 7 years
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Ichiro Suzuki wants to play until he’s 50
Thursday’s Say Hey, Baseball looks at Ichiro’s dream of living til he dies, bad news for Steven Matz, and a curious Yankees’ decision.
Listen, we know it’s tough to catch up on everything happening in the baseball world each morning. There are all kinds of stories, rumors, game coverage, and Vines of dudes getting hit in the beans every day. Trying to find all of it while on your way to work or sitting at your desk just isn’t easy. It’s OK, though. We’re going to do the heavy lifting for you each morning and find the things you need to see from within the SB Nation baseball network, as well as from elsewhere. Please hold your applause until the end, or at least until after you subscribe to the newsletter.
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Ichiro Suzuki is 43 years old. He's the oldest position player in Major League Baseball, and the second-oldest among active players, behind only the Braves' Bartolo Colon. That's not nearly old enough for Ichiro to be impressed with: he recently said that he wants to play until he's 50 years old, and he assured his interviewer that he wasn't joking about that.
As is, Ichiro has already somehow played for 16 years in MLB despite not even joining a team there until he was already 27 years old. He began his professional career in Nippon Professional Baseball at 18, amassed 1,278 hits, then headed to the Mariners to begin one of the greatest careers in MLB history. And the fact that's not nearly enough for Ichiro is either sad or inspiring, depending on how you approach things.
The sad part is Ichiro not being able to even fathom while retirement is like, and suggesting "I'll just die" once he's done playing baseball. Like, it's a great line and a better headline, but also, hey wait a second Ichiro life isn't all work, you know. We need to find Ichiro some extracurricular activities. He doesnt' want to be on the couch, so they need to be active, probably outdoorsy. We've got seven years, everyone: he's not planning on retiring until 50. We can figure this out for the sake of one of our favorites.
Predictions! Features! A theme! The 2017 SB Nation MLB preview is here, and you can read all of it. In fact, we encourage you to do so. Be warned, though, there is a whole lot of it, so make sure to take breaks and stay hydrated. The last part isn't necessary to read, it's just good advice.
Just a liiiittle bit more to the left here, and Adam Duvall could have hit himself in the face with a home run. Well, his face on a video board, anyway. Point is, he hit the ball very far.
Francisco Lindor is trying to save baseball from itself, writes old friend of SB Nation, Joon Lee.
Beyond the Box Score thinks they might have found a Freddie Freeman weakness. Maybe.
The Yankees rejected trade offers for Zack Cozart and Jose Iglesias, and they probably had the right idea.
Steven Matz will not make the Mets' Opening Day roster thanks to elbow soreness.
The Pirates optioned Drew Hutchison rather than make him their fifth starter, so that competition suddenly opened up days before the season begins.
Tim Anderson recently signed a pre-arbitration deal slash extension with the White Sox, and he went out and bought his mom a new car with his new money.
The Astros did more in center than just remove Tal's Hill: they built a brand new concourse, too.
Aaron Judge might start the season in the minors because the Yankees still think Aaron Hicks can be good. Sure, it's possible, but Aaron Judge could also be good, and is probably a better bet.
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inter-sekt-blog · 6 years
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The Styxxoplix Show Episode 121: Running Out Of Our Minds with Steven Leyba & Steven Lee Matz Recorded in the Erik Mollberg studio, WELT 95.7 FM - Fort Wayne Community Radio, August 19, 2018.
#RogueGallery #MindOverMedia #InterSekt #Artists #Art #DigitalArtDistrict #InterSektArt #NWC #Subversive #Cerebral #Ubiquity#AnyoneCanDraw #ArtEvolution #Radio #Interview #Styxxoplix #StyxxoplixShow #StevenLeyba #StevenLeeMatz #Art2018#NewWorldCreative
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stevenleematz · 6 years
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The Styxxoplix Show Episode 121: Running Out Of Our Minds with Steven Leyba & Steven Lee Matz Recorded in the Erik Mollberg studio, WELT 95.7 FM - Fort Wayne Community Radio, August 19, 2018. Go to https://soundcloud.com/the-styxxoplix-show/episode-121-running-out-of-our-minds-with-steven-leyva-steven-lee-matz #RogueGallery #MindOverMedia #InterSekt #Artists #Art #DigitalArtDistrict #InterSektArt #NWC #Subversive #Cerebral #Ubiquity #AnyoneCanDraw #ArtEvolution #Radio #Interview #Styxxoplix #StyxxoplixShow #StevenLeyba #StevenLeeMatz #Art2018 #NewWorldCreative #likesforlikes #likeforlike #like4likes #likefollowshare
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