#tyler kolek
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basketballjersey · 14 days ago
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nbatrades · 2 years ago
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Denver Nuggets Acquire Ismael Kamagate in 2022 Draft
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On July 6th, 2022, the Denver Nuggets traded a future 2024 second round draft pick (Tyler Kolek) to the Portland Trail Blazers for the draft rights to Ismael Kamagate.
The Denver Nuggets had one of the elite centers in NBA history in Nikola Jokic. During Jokic's time with the club, it seems like Denver has perpetually been trying to find the right backups.
One choice the Nuggets made came in the 2022 draft when the club made a deal to acquire 6-11 center Ismael Kamagate with the 46th pick in the draft. On that day, the Detroit Pistons originally held the pick and sent it to the Portland Trail Blazers in a trade involving Jerami Grant.
Portland subsequently moved the pick to Denver for a 2024 second round pick. The pick the Nuggets sent to Portland was the more favorable of Minnesota and Charlotte’s 2024 second-round selections.
At 21 years old, Kamagate was a developmental piece. Born in Paris, France, the center was playing for Paris Basketball of LNB Pro A. Kamagate had a 7-3 wingspan and finished well around the rim. The hope was that the big man could be a backup center in the future for the Nuggets.
After the trade, Kamagate joined Denver's 2022 Summer League team in Las Vegas. The big man appeared in five games (four starts) and was solid with 5.4 PPG on 80% from the field, 5.0 RPG and 1.2 BPG in 19.3 MPG. Kamagate returned to play for Paris Basketball for the 2022-23 season.
Kamagate played once again for the Nuggets in Summer League in the summer of 2023. The 6-11 center averaged 6.8 PPG, 6.0 RPG, 1.0 APG and 1.5 BPG across four contests and 18.2 MPG.
During the summer of 2023, Kamagate signed with Olimpia Milano, a Milan, Italy-based team in Lega Basket A. Nuggets assistant general manager Tommy Balcetis said the team wanted Kamagate to gain more playing experience overseas so he could step into a backup role years later, ready to play.
The Nuggets later dealt Kamagate's rights to the Los Angeles Clippers for cash considerations at the 2024 trade deadline.
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The second round pick that Portland acquired was a 2024 second rounder. Since the Hornets finished tied for the third-worst record, the pick was 34th in the 2024 NBA Draft and the Blazers selected Marquette University point guard Tyler Kolek with the pick.
Portland subsequently dealt the pick on draft day to the New York Knicks for the draft rights to Dani Diez and three second round picks in 2027, 2029 and 2030.
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Ismael Kamagate on being drafted by the Nuggets via trade along with other draft picks Christian Braun and Peyton Watson (via Nuggets.com):
"[It's] a dream come true. I think we're all proud to be here and we can't wait to work."
Image via Getty Images/Bart Young
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nyknicksbrasil · 2 months ago
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Novato dos Knicks chama a atenção com desempenho estelar na pré-temporada
Parece cada vez mais provável que o novato Tyler Kolek force sua entrada na rotação do New York Knicks. Considerando que eles sacrificaram profundidade para melhorar drasticamente seu talento de alto nível, isso seria ótimo para os Knicks. Na preparação para o NBA Draft de 2024, a maioria dos mock drafts viu Kolek como uma escolha de primeira rodada, apesar de sua 34ª seleção geral. Após uma…
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wausaupilot · 1 year ago
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AP Player of the Week: Tyler Kolek leads Marquette to pair of wins with 45 points, 15 boards
The All-American guard had 28 points and eight rebounds in an 86-65 romp past No. 12 Texas, then poured in 17 points with seven rebounds in a win over Notre Dame.
By The Associated Press The Associated Press national player of the week in men’s basketball for Week 5 of the season: TYLER KOLEK, Marquette The All-American guard had 28 points and eight rebounds in an 86-65 romp past No. 12 Texas, then poured in 17 points with seven rebounds in a win over Notre Dame. He was especially devastating inside the arc, where Kolek was a combined 12 for 12 across…
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goalhofer · 8 months ago
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2024 San Diego Padres Famous Relations
#32 Stephen Kolek: Brother of former GCL Marlins P Tyler Kolek. #75 Robert Suárez: Brother of Norfolk Tides P Albert Suárez. #12 Luis Campusano: Son of former Charleston Rainbows 1B Genaro Campusano. #2 Xander Bogaerts: Brother of ACL Cubs C Jair Bogaerts. #13 Manny Machado: Brother-in-law of MLB Network analyst Yonder Alonso. #10 Jurickson Profar: Brother of Muluk Kratshi 3B Juremi Profar and DSL White Sox SS Jurdrick Profar. #23 Fernando Tatís; Jr.: Son of former New York Mets 3B Fernando Tatís & brother of former ACL White Sox SS Elijah Tatís.
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milehighclownery · 1 month ago
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tyler kolek looks like discount tom cruise. whenever he checks in his face gives me a jumpscare.
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collectingall · 1 month ago
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∀ TYLER KOLEK - 2023-24 Basketball Bowman's Best U Red Geometric Auto 4/10 http://blog.collectingall.com/TFcJZm
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nbacolletion · 4 months ago
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3 takeaways from Knicks' 2024 Summer League, including top notch point guard play
Here are three takeaways from Knicks Summer League, including an impressive display by Tyler Kolek.
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news2024news · 4 months ago
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Knicks Mailbag: How does Tyler Kolek fit into the rotation? http://dlvr.it/T9tGwq
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bbcviral · 8 months ago
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Marquette star Tyler Kolek 'looks like himself' in practice ahead of NCAA tourney http://dlvr.it/T4MlX0
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basketballjersey · 1 month ago
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mmhaterade · 2 years ago
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The 2023 Hater's Guide to the East Region.
This blog is not in any way affiliated with the NCAA, its entities, subsidiaries, or member institutions. This is a humor site and should be treated as such. We're all on our way out -- act accordingly. 
1. Purdue (29-5). Since the 1993-94 season, Purdue has been undoubtedly much better in men’s basketball than their fellow in-state rival Indiana. During this time, the Boilers have 635 wins (580 for Indiana), 7 Big Ten championships (3 for IU), 22 NCAA tournament appearances (18 for IU), 10 Sweet 16 appearances (4 for IU), 3 Elite 8 appearances (1 for IU), and a whopping twelve top-4 seeds in the tournament (3 for IU). Purdue has also been lucky enough to have employed just two head coaches during that time, while IU has cycled through the husk of Bob Knight and four other coaches (now a fifth). And yet despite turning into a juggernaut and dwarfing all the success of their hated rival…IU still lives rent free in the head of every Boiler fan. Rent free because this team will ALWAYS be the little brother to Indiana basketball. 
2. Marquette (28-6). Marquette is good for a Final Four run once every quarter of a century. Unfortunately, we are still five years away from this inevitability, but any showing other than last year’s evisceration at the hands of North Carolina would be a welcome sight for a program forced to endure Steve Wojciechowski for seven (!!!) years. Holy shit, he was there for seven years?!?! To experience Wojo’s coaching is to know what it’s like to wear a ball gag combined with a Roundy’s paper bag (with no holes) over your face. This year’s team was picked to finish ninth in the Big East -- by a bunch of idiots who underestimated the magical power of 77 ounces of Real Chili. No school has a cooler victory chant than “Ring Out Ahoya,” and fuck you if you think otherwise. P.S.: Tyler Kolek has previously or is currently finger-banging your sister.
3. Kansas State (23-9). Reading about this squad’s history is simply depressing, considering their best run (Elite 8 in 2010) is better known for a double-overtime thriller where Gus Johnson orgasmed on live television. If you search “Kansas State men’s basketball history” on Wikipedia, you receive an error message that redirects you to the page for the Kansas Jayhawks. SI once published a fluff piece on famed wide receiver Jordy Nelson. The author loves to visit abandoned farms, pull down their pants, and rut mud. Wait, that may actually be a sociology class at K-State.
4. Tennessee (23-10). Historically, Tennessee ranks third in the SEC in all-time wins yet has only one Elite 8 appearance and has only won their conference tournament twice since 1943. Sounds like Kentucky has owned the shit out of them for the last 75 years! Their Wikipedia site also asks if you meant to search for their women’s team, because of course you did. Speaking of them, do you remember Tyler Summitt? Are you wondering how he is doing after being named a head coach at such a young age? Well, he had an extramarital affair with one of his players, his wife was criticized for mentioning she hired him as an assistant at the Ohio high school where she was employed, and he’s receiving his mother’s state pension which will pay him $173,000 a year for the rest of his life. I hope he gets pegged by Ron Jeremy wearing a barbed wire condom.
5. Duke (26-8). My greatest regret in life is that they were not the first #1 seed to lose to a #16 seed. Do you want to know why people hate Duke? It’s not just because they win a lot of games, are always given the benefit of the doubt, and are ESPN’s favorite team. The real reason people hate Duke: every single person associated with this school, be it their faculty, staff, alumni base, fans, or even tangential supporters is a sniveling asshole. Fancy yourself not giving the proper respect to the Blue Devils for a 26-win season or an inevitable march through a mirthless conference tournament? You can fully expect to hear some sanctimonious whining until you bend the knee. Coach K retired last year and yet he will not GO AWAY. He is the Jason Vorhees of college basketball. They are going to trot Mr. King of the Assholes out for every UNC/Duke rematch for the next twenty years; after he dies, his goddamn casket will be wheeled out to the court. I have nothing good to say about this vile school. Fuck this fucking team forever.
6. Kentucky (21-11).
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7. Michigan State (19-12). Tom Izzo is 68 years old but looks 88. Just look at him – he looks so inept; you can almost picture him trying to use FaceTime while screaming a spiel of f-bombs. The former Division II All-American has never left the state of Michigan save for a two-month stay as an assistant coach at Tulsa back in 1986 (Editor’s note: he is probably wanted for murder there. He has managed to coach the Spartans to eight Final Fours since 1999 (including three straight from 1999-2001) but has one championship (2000) and just one other championship game appearance (2009). Izzo does have an awesome recruiting class arriving for 2023, but in the meantime his best player is…Joey Hauser? Joey Hauser gets posterized more than Lauren Boebert got raw dogged during her days as an escort. 
8. Memphis (26-8). Fun fact: putting “Memphis State” on the uniforms guarantees you will forget about the vacated national championship game appearance. Memphis? Never heard of them! Memphis State? Yeah, great up and coming program! Completely different school! Derrick Rose? Never heard of him!  The Tigers’ current head coach is best known for starring in a 1994 movie about “blue chip” basketball recruits being paid to attend fictional Western University. Memphis' top assistant coach left his two previous head coaching jobs (at Missouri and Tulsa) amidst NCAA investigations. A perfect fit! The NCAA may be a corrupt, money-grabbing institution, but what kind of illegal activities draw the attention of the NCAA while coaching at Tulsa? Midget strippers for recruits? Dungeon methamphetamine lab? Fans of this team are super into barbeque bukkake.
9. Florida Atlantic (31-3). This is nothing more than a made up college who recruited Smash Williams of Friday Night Lights. Here’s a series of headlines detailing the adventures and exploits of FAU’s #1 fan, Florida Man: 
Florida Man Breaks into Joe’s Crab Shack, Steals Alcohol, Leaves Poop as Payment
Florida Man Busted with Meth, Guns, and Baby Gator in Truck
Naked Florida Man Humps Tree, Punches Deputy
Drunk Florida Man Drives Lawnmower on Highway
Florida Man Gets Trapped in Porta-Potty, Busted for Drugs
10. USC (22-10). Coach Andy Enfield will always be remembered for orchestrating Florida Gulf Coast’s Dunk City. Still amazing ten years later! However, USC is at least the third program in this year’s field to have a “Kevin O’Neill era” at some point in their history. In case you’ve forgotten (and you probably have), Kevin O’Neill got into an argument with a prominent booster from a former employer (Arizona) while coaching at USC. USC has pretty much whitewashed any record of this guy coaching for them but the point remains: if your favorite team has a “Kevin O’Neill” era, your school has made a grave error. Here's former Marquette coach Mike Deane ripping Kevin O'Neill.
11. Providence (21-11). Ah, the luck of the weird creepy Friars. Providence is among the luckiest teams we’ve seen. This should tell you everything you need to know about the best season (last year) in their program’s history. Look at that chart about halfway down, among all the horrible low-level teams, it’s Providence! Not to be confused with the University of Providence in Great Falls, Montana because of their equal amounts of overweight white hags – which is interesting because Providence didn’t admit women until the 1970s. That was not long ago!
12. Oral Roberts (30-4). Oral Roberts was an American televangelist whose preaching emphasized “seed faith” which strangely, has nothing to do with masturbation. Roberts made a living extracting money (er, contributions) from poor folks via direct-mail campaigns, eventually leading a $120 million-a-year organization! Too many religious leaders use their sway as a tool to criticize those they feel are weak-minded or need saving. And they always need money! The late George Carlin once said “Religion convinced the world that there’s an invisible man in the sky who watches everything you do. And there’s ten things he doesn’t want you to do or else you’ll go to a burning place with a lake of fire until the end of eternity. But he loves you – and he needs money! He’s all powerful, but he can’t handle money.” Oral Roberts was no different – the money he raised went towards fine Italian silk suits, diamond rings and gold bracelets (always airbrushed out in photos), three Mercedes cars, and a home in Beverly Hills. Roberts was sued in 1988 by City of Faith Medical Center, who claimed Roberts and his son Richard were frauds who did not visit or heal patients in the hospital. That’s a perfect summation: these Golden Eagles are frauds.
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13. Louisiana (26-7). Making their first tournament appearance since 2014, the “Ragin’ Cajuns,” coached by noted Creole chef Tony Chachere, whose roots date back to 1905 when he founded this college originally known as Southwestern Louisiana. They will be a popular pick in the first round due to their surprisingly competitive games as a #13 seed: upsetting Oklahoma in 1992, a five point loss to Tennessee in 2000, and a six point loss to Louisville in 2005 (since vacated). Their beautiful swampland campus features a full-scale hunting and fishing camp. You will remember their most famous player Elfrid Payton as “oh yeah, that one guy!” Whenever you play this team, you receive a free entry into the Tony Chachere's Creole Club.
14. Montana State (25-9). Montana might be a gargantuan place, but there is no reason for this state to have TWO universities, particularly when they both offer the exact same majors of study in Cattle Decapitation, Crisco Wrasslin,’ and Bobcat Normalization. All of their dorm rooms come with built-in sleep apnea equipment. Their live mascot is a 450-pound vegetarian named Lard Biscuit.
15. Vermont (23-10). Beautiful state? Check. Cool college town? Check. Legal weed? Check (if you are 21 or older). Killer mascot? Check. The 2004-05 Vermont Catamounts in the NCAA tournament introduced me to the genius of Gus Johnson. His play-by-play call of this game is sublime; when UVM guard T.J. Sorrentine hit a LONG three in overtime to extend a narrow Vermont lead over heavily favored Syracuse, Gus lost his mind. Given the chance, I would pick Vermont every year in our annual NCAA draft/pool, knowing full well they will not advance. They are allergic to offensive rebounds, have not beat a top-125 team all year, and must be sacrificed to meet Weber's insatiable blood lust.
16. Texas Southern (14-20) or Farleigh Dickinson (19-15). Texas Southern, of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (only two teams with winning records) is becoming a regular “who gives a fuck, we are watching the NIT game instead” play-in team. FDU finished second to Merrimack, losing in the conference tournament final. Merrimack is ineligible for the Big Dance as they are still transitioning from Division II to I. So FDU is fortunate to be playing at all (not for us, they fucking suck)! I wonder if the guys on the teams selected for the play-in games ever feel like Chris Farley’s character in the classic SNL skit Japanese Game Show. No, no…you’re not watching a tournament game, It’s a totally different game!
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wafact · 2 years ago
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Marquette’s Tyler Kolek Wins Big East Tournament MVP Award, Profits From Preseason Comment
Marquette’s Tyler Kolek, center, the tournament’s most outstanding player, celebrates with his … [+] teammates after winning an NCAA college basketball game against Xavier for the championship of the Big East men’s tournament, Saturday, March 11, 2023, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. Marquette point guard Tyler Kolek walked around…
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wausaupilot · 1 year ago
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No. 5 Marquette coasts to 95-65 over Rider, loses Tyler Kolek late
Marquette continuedsto prove it can score big, after putting up 92 on Northern Illinois on Monday.
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Kam Jones scored 23 points and Oso Ighodaro had 13 points and 11 rebounds as No. 5 Marquette coasted to a 95-65 win over Rider on Friday night. The Golden Eagles lost reigning Big East Player of the Year Tyler Kolek late in the game. Kolek, who had six assists and five rebounds, hobbled off the court and into the locker room with just under 8 minutes left and did not…
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bongaboi · 2 years ago
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Marquette: 2022-23 Big East Men's Basketball Champions
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NEW YORK (AP) — Tyler Kolek and No. 6 Marquette raced out to a hefty lead and never looked back, beating No. 15 Xavier 65-51 on Saturday night to win the Big East Tournament for the first time.
Kolek, the Big East Player of the Year, had 20 points and eight rebounds as the top-seeded Golden Eagles (28-6) dominated a Big East final that brought a Midwestern flavor to Madison Square Garden.
Coach Shaka Smart’s surprising team will head into the NCAA Tournament with a nine-game winning streak after Marquette’s first appearance in the Big East championship game resulted in one of its best performances of a scintillating season.
Kolek’s steal and layup made it 51-27 with 14:12 left. Less than a minute later, after two offensive rebounds by the Golden Eagles, David Joplin made a corner 3 to double up second-seeded Xavier (25-9).
Joplin finished with 12 points. Kolek was selected the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player.
Adam Kunkel scored 12 points to lead the Musketeers, who had a five-game winning streak snapped.
This was the first Big East title game since the conference dropped football in 2013 to not feature any of its longstanding Northeast members.
Still, the Milwaukee school (Marquette, which joined in 2005) and the Cincinnati school (Xavier, which joined in 2013) filled The Garden for the first 1 vs. 2 seed Big East Tournament final in 19 years.
It looked more like a 1-16 NCAA Tournament game for a while.
Marquette jumped out to a 21-4 lead, and never relented.
During a particularly splendid 2 1/2 minutes, Stevie Mitchell swished a corner 3, Kolek came off a screen to make another 3, Kam Jones got free for a reverse layup after a nifty hesitation move on the baseline and Kolek converted a layup off a give-and-go with Oso Ighodaro.
At that point, Marquette was up 33-10 with 7:02 left in the first half and the Golden Eagles had not yet committed a turnover.
The Musketeers responded with a 14-5 run to end the period, but with their fans chanting “We are, Mar-quette!” the Golden Eagles went into the break up 39-24.
Marquette’s only previous league tournament title was as a member of Conference USA in 1997.
Twenty-six years later, the Golden Eagles were able to clear the bench in the final minute of the Big East championship game and their fans were finally able to make Madison Square Garden feel like home.
BIG PICTURE
Xavier: The Musketeers played what coach Sean Miller called one of their best two-way games of the season in the semifinals Friday night against Creighton. Less than 24 hours later, they did almost nothing well. Xavier shot 34% from the field, forced only four turnovers and was held 12 points under its previous season low. The Musketeers fell to 0-2 in Big East championship games.
Marquette: Smart, who took VCU to a Final Four but never could find that consistent winning formula at Texas, guided a team picked to finish ninth in the Big East in the preseason coaches’ poll to maybe its best season since Dwyane Wade led Marquette to a Final Four in 2003.
UP NEXT
Xavier: Miller will have the Musketeers back in the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2018.
Marquette: The Golden Eagles will be making their second straight trip to the NCAA Tournament and figure to earn perhaps a No. 2 seed.
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goalhofer · 2 months ago
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2024 1st MLB Games
March 28, 2024
Jung-Hoo Lee (San Francisco) at San Diego.
Erik Miller (San Francisco) at San Diego.
Jackson Merrill (San Diego) vs. San Francisco.
Matsui Yūki (San Diego) vs. San Francisco.
Colt Keith (Detroit) at Chicago White Sox.
Victor Scott; Jr. (St. Louis) at Los Angeles Dodgers.
Wyatt Langford (Texas) vs. Chicago Cubs.
Darell Hernáiz (Oakland) vs. Cleveland.
Anthony Molina (Colorado) at Arizona.
Blaze Alexander (Arizona) vs. Colorado.
March 29, 2024
Jackson Chourio (Milwaukee) at New York Mets.
Clayton Beeter (New York Yankees) at Houston.
Mitch Spence (Oakland) vs. Cleveland.
Landen Roupp (San Francisco) at San Diego.
March 30, 2024
Oliver Dunn (Milwaukee) at New York Mets.
Jordan Leasure (Chicago White Sox) vs. Detroit.
Cade Smith (Cleveland) at Oakland.
Kyle McCann (Oakland) vs. Cleveland.
Christopher Martin (Minnesota) at Kansas City.
Jared Jones (Pittsburgh) at Miami.
Nasim Nuñez (Washington) at Cincinnati.
LaVictor Lipscomb (Washington) at Cincinnati.
Ben Brown (Chicago Cubs) at Texas.
Graham Pauley (San Diego) vs. San Francisco.
Stephen Kolek (San Diego) vs. San Francisco.
Yamamoto Yoshinobu (Los Angeles Dodgers) vs. St. Louis.
Justin Slaten (Boston) at Seattle.
March 31, 2024
Austin Shenton (Tampa Bay) vs. Toronto.
Matt Sauer (Kansas City) vs. Minnesota.
Kai-Wei Teng (San Francisco) at San Diego.
Matsui Yūki (San Diego) vs. San Francisco.
April 1, 2024
Imanaga Shōta (Chicago Cubs) vs. Colorado.
Jorge Barrosa (Arizona) vs. New York Yankees.
Nick Avila (San Francisco) at Los Angeles Dodgers.
April 3, 2024
Ryan Fernandez (St. Louis) at San Diego.
April 5, 2024
Justin Foscue (Texas) vs. Houston.
April 7, 2024
Pedro Pagés (St. Louis) vs. Miami.
April 8, 2024
Josh Maciejewski (New York Yankees) vs. Miami.
Wenceel Pérez (Detroit) at Pittsburgh.
Michael Henley (Houston) at Texas.
April 9, 2024
Dedniel Núñez (New York Mets) at Atlanta.
Davis Wendzel (Texas) vs. Oakland.
April 10, 2024
Jackson Holliday (Baltimore) at Boston.
Spencer Arrighetti (Houston) at Kansas City.
April 11, 2024
Tyler Jay (New York Mets) at Atlanta.
April 12, 2024
Max Schuemann (Oakland) vs. Washington.
April 13, 2024
Yariel Rodríguez (Toronto) vs. Colorado.
April 14, 2024
Cole Winn (Texas) at Houston.
April 15, 2024
Nick Nastrini (Chicago White Sox) vs. Kansas City.
Jonatan Clase (Seattle) vs. Cincinnati.
Mitchell Parker (Washington) at Los Angeles Dodgers.
Ricky Vanasco (Los Angeles Dodgers) vs. Washington.
April 16, 2024
Jair Camargo (Minnesota) at Baltimore.
David Bañuelos (Baltimore) vs. Minnesota.
Charles Whitley (Houston) vs. Atlanta.
Andy Pages (Los Angeles Dodgers) vs. Washington.
April 17, 2024
Jhonny Pereda (Miami) vs. San Francisco.
Jonathan Cannon (Chicago White Sox) vs. Kansas City.
Landon Knack (Los Angeles Dodgers) vs. Washington.
April 18, 2024
Jack Leiter (Texas) at Detroit.
April 19, 2024
Cam Booser (Boston) at Pittsburgh.
April 20, 2024
Roddery Muñoz (Miami) at Chicago Cubs.
April 23, 2024
Tobias Myers (Milwaukee) at Pittsburgh.
April 24, 2024
Addison Barger (Toronto) at Kansas City.
April 26, 2024
Anthony Maldonado (Miami) at Washington.
April 28, 2024
Will Klein (Kansas City) at Detroit.
Emmanuel Ramírez (Miami) vs. Washington.
Zac Kristofak (Los Angeles Angels) vs. Minnesota.
Leo Rivas (Seattle) vs. Arizona.
April 30, 2024
Jordan Beck (Colorado) at Miami.
Tyler Black (Milwaukee) vs. Tampa Bay.
Mario Loperfido (Houston) vs. Cleveland.
May 1, 2024
Matthew Walston (Arizona) vs. Los Angeles Dodgers.
May 2, 2024
Uwasawa Naoyuki (Boston) vs. San Francisco.
May 3, 2024
Brett Harris (Oakland) vs. Miami.
May 4, 2024
Bryan Ramos (Chicago White Sox) at St. Louis.
Christian Scott (New York Mets) at Tampa Bay.
Randy Rodríguez (San Francisco) at Philadelphia.
May 5, 2024
Eli Villalobos (Miami) at Oakland.
May 6, 2024
Mason Black (San Francisco) at Philadelphia.
Kyle Manzardo (Cleveland) vs. Detroit.
May 7, 2024
Jonathan Ornelas (Texas) at Oakland.
Tyler Ferguson (Oakland) vs. Texas.
Chris Roycroft (St. Louis) vs. New York Mets.
May 10, 2024
Robert Gasser (Milwaukee) vs. St. Louis.
May 11, 2024
Paul Skenes (Pittsburgh) vs. Chicago Cubs.
May 13, 2024
Jacob Hurtubise (Cincinnati) at Arizona.
May 15, 2024
Chris Roller (Milwaukee) vs. Pittsburgh.
May 21, 2024
Johnathan Rodríguez (Cleveland) vs. New York Mets.
May 22, 2024
Luis Vázquez (Chicago Cubs) vs. Atlanta.
Porter Hodge (Chicago Cubs) vs. Atlanta.
Zach DeLoach (Chicago White Sox) at Toronto.
May 26, 2024
Gerson Garabito (Texas) at Minnesota.
Jack O'Loughlin (Oakland) vs. Houston.
May 27, 2024
Ryan Bliss (Seattle) vs. Houston.
May 28, 2024
Trenton Brooks (San Francisco) vs. Philadelphia.
May 29, 2024
Grant Koch (Pittsburgh) at Detroit.
Keider Montero (Detroit) vs. Pittsburgh.
Spencer Schwellenbach (Atlanta) vs. Washington.
May 31, 2024
Justin Sterner (Tampa Bay) at Baltimore.
Brady Basso (Oakland) at Atlanta.
June 1, 2024
Ryan Loutos (St. Louis) at Philadelphia.
June 2, 2024
Jamie Westbrook (Boston) vs. Detroit.
Daniel Schneemann (Cleveland) vs. Washington.
June 3, 2024
Connor Norby (Baltimore) at Toronto.
Justyn-Henry Malloy (Detroit) at Texas.
Angel Chivilli (Colorado) vs. Cincinnati.
June 4, 2024
D.P. Herz (Washington) vs. New York Mets.
Robert Ellis (Chicago White Sox) at Chicago Cubs.
Blake Dunn (Cincinnati) at Colorado.
Adam Mazur (San Diego) at Los Angeles Angels.
June 6, 2024
Cade Povich (Baltimore) at Toronto.
Greg Jones; Jr. (Colorado) at St. Louis.
June 9, 2024
Hurston Waldrep (Atlanta) at Washington.
Adael Amador (Colorado) at St. Louis.
Tyler Locklear (Seattle) at Kansas City.
June 10, 2024
Michel Otañez (Oakland) vs. Toronto.
June 11, 2024
Carlos Rodríguez (Milwaukee) vs. Toronto.
Drew Thorpe (Chicago White Sox) at Seattle.
June 16, 2024
Harrison Holmes (Atlanta) vs. Tampa Bay.
Spencer Bivens (San Francisco) vs. Los Angeles Angels.
June 17, 2024
Brandon Eisert (Toronto) vs. Boston.
June 18, 2024
Ben Rice (New York Yankees) vs. Baltimore.
Michael Petersen (Los Angeles Dodgers) at Colorado.
June 20, 2024
Adam Kloffenstein (St. Louis) vs. San Francisco.
Bradley Blalock (Milwaukee) at San Diego.
June 21, 2024
Orelvis Martínez (Toronto) at Cleveland.
John Bloss (Houston) vs. Baltimore.
June 22, 2024
Armando Álvarez (Oakland) vs. Minnesota.
Ángel Martínez (Cleveland) vs. Toronto.
June 23, 2024
Steward Berroa (Toronto) at Cleveland.
Bryan King (Houston) vs. Baltimore.
Luis Contreras (Houston) vs. Baltimore.
June 24, 2024
David Mercado (Philadelphia) at Detroit.
Levi Jordan (Cincinnati) vs. Pittsburgh.
C.J.W. Alexander (Kansas City) vs. Miami.
Raymond Burgos (San Francisco) vs. Chicago Cubs.
June 25, 2024
Yosver Zulueta (Cincinnati) vs. Pittsburgh.
June 26, 2024
Valente Bellozo (Miami) at Kansas City.
Jhonkensy Noel (Cleveland) at Baltimore.
Hayden Birdsong (San Francisco) vs. Chicago Cubs.
June 27, 2024
David Festa (Minnesota) at Arizona.
June 29, 2024
Aaron Schunk (Colorado) at Chicago White Sox.
Gordon Graceffo (St. Louis) vs. Cincinnati.
Bailey Horn (Boston) vs. San Diego.
July 1, 2024
James Wood (Washington) vs. New York Mets.
July 3, 2024
Brooks Lee (Minnesota) vs. Detroit.
Cristian Mena (Arizona) at Los Angeles Dodgers.
July 4, 2024
Leo Jimenez (Toronto) vs. Houston.
July 5, 2024
Walter Pennington (Kansas City) at Colorado.
July 7, 2024
Tyler Phillips (Philadelphia) at Atlanta.
Tanner Gordon (Colorado) vs. Kansas City.
Justin Wrobleski (Los Angeles Dodgers) vs. Milwaukee.
July 8, 2024
Eric Orze (New York Mets) at Pittsburgh.
Rece Hinds (Cincinnati) vs. Colorado.
Yilber Díaz (Arizona) vs. Atlanta.
July 9, 2024
Hunter Bigge (Chicago Cubs) at Baltimore.
July 10, 2024
Daniel Robert (Texas) at Los Angeles Angels.
July 11, 2024
Jack Kochanowicz (Los Angeles Angels) vs. Seattle.
July 14, 2024
Sean Reynolds (San Diego) vs. Atlanta.
July 19, 2024
Riley Baldwin (Chicago White Sox) at Kansas City.
Jacob Wilson (Oakland) vs. Los Angeles Angels.
July 22, 2024
Ignacio Alvarez; Jr. (Atlanta) vs. Cincinnati.
River Ryan (Los Angeles Dodgers) vs. San Francisco.
July 24, 2024
Chayce McDermott (Baltimore) at Miami.
July 28, 2024
Joey Cantillo (Cleveland) at Philadelphia.
July 29, 2024
Francis Dingler (Detroit) vs. Cleveland.
Bryan Sammons (Detroit) vs. Cleveland.
July 30, 2024
Will Warren (New York Yankees) at Philadelphia.
Austin Kitchen (Miami) at Tampa Bay.
Fraser Ellard (Chicago White Sox) vs. Kansas City.
July 31, 2024
Luis De Los Santos (Toronto) at Baltimore.
Michael McGreevy (St. Louis) vs. Texas.
Eric Yang (Cincinnati) vs. Chicago Cubs.
Hunter Feduccia (Los Angeles Dodgers) at San Diego.
August 2, 2024
Coby Mayo (Baltimore) at Cleveland.
Nick Sogard (Boston) at Texas.
Kameron Misner (Tampa Bay) at Houston.
August 3, 2024
Pedro León (Houston) vs. Tampa Bay.
August 4, 2024
Brant Hurter (Detroit) vs. Kansas City.
Connor Gillaspie (Cleveland) vs. Baltimore.
August 5, 2024
Kyler Bush (Chicago White Sox) at Oakland.
August 6, 2024
Zach Dezenzo (Houston) at Texas.
August 7, 2024
Adrian Del Castillo (Arizona) at Cleveland.
August 8, 2024
Parker Dunshee (Atlanta) vs. Milwaukee.
August 10, 2024
Max Lazar (Philadelphia) at Arizona.
August 11, 2024
Troy Taylor (Seattle) vs. New York Mets.
August 12, 2024
Mickey Gasper (Boston) vs. Texas.
Will Wagner (Toronto) at Los Angeles Angels.
August 13, 2024
Andrés Chaparro (Washington) at Baltimore.
Orlando Ribalta (Washington) at Baltimore.
Daniel Matthews (Minnesota) vs. Kansas City.
August 14, 2024
Grant McCray (San Francisco) vs. Atlanta.
August 15, 2024
Chase Shugart (Boston) at Baltimore.
August 16, 2024
Niko Kavadas (Los Angeles Angels) vs. Atlanta.
Jace Jung (Detroit) vs. New York Yankees.
Trey Sweeney (Detroit) vs. New York Yankees.
August 17, 2024
Grant Holman (Oakland) vs. San Francisco.
Shay Whitcomb (Houston) vs. Chicago White Sox.
Drew Romo (Colorado) vs. San Diego.
August 19, 2024
Julian Aguiar (Cincinnati) at Toronto.
August 21, 2024
Jeff Criswell (Colorado) at Washington.
Jack Neely (Chicago Cubs) vs. Detroit.
J.T. Ginn (Oakland) vs. Tampa Bay.
August 24, 2024
Luis Peralta (Colorado) at New York Yankees.
August 25, 2024
Ryan Zeferjahn (Los Angeles Angels) at Toronto.
Tyler Gentry (Kansas City) vs. Philadelphia.
August 26, 2024
Dylan Crews (Washington) vs. New York Yankees.
Brady Feigl (Pittsburgh) vs. Chicago Cubs.
Ty Madden (Detroit) at Chicago White Sox.
Griffin Conine (Miami) at Colorado.
August 27, 2024
Ryan Miller (Los Angeles Angels) at Detroit.
Jonathan Bermúdez (Miami) at Colorado.
August 28, 2024
Evan Kravetz (Cincinnati) vs. Oakland.
August 30, 2024
Rhett Lowder (Cincinnati) vs. Milwaukee.
Seth Halvorsen (Colorado) vs. Baltimore.
Samuel Aldegheri (Los Angeles Angels) vs. Seattle.
August 31, 2024
Ben Casparius (Los Angeles Dodgers) at Arizona.
September 1, 2024
Darren Baker (Washington) vs. Chicago Cubs.
Zach Brzykcy (Washington) vs. Chicago Cubs.
Caden Dana (Los Angeles Angels) vs. Seattle.
September 3, 2024
Jairo Iriarte (Chicago White Sox) at Baltimore.
Michael Helman (Minnesota) at Tampa Bay.
Logan Driscoll (Tampa Bay) vs. Minnesota.
September 4, 2024
Erik Sabrowski (Cleveland) at Kansas City.
September 5, 2024
DaShawn Keirsey; Jr. (Minnesota) at Tampa Bay.
Mason Montgomery (Tampa Bay) vs. Minnesota.
September 6, 2024
Sandro Fabian (Texas) vs. Los Angeles Angels.
September 7, 2024
Javier Sanoja (Miami) vs. Philadelphia.
Kenneth Hill (Colorado) at Milwaukee.
Bryce Teodosio (Los Angeles Angels) at Texas.
September 8, 2024
Billy Cook (Pittsburgh) vs. Washington.
Richard Fitts (Boston) vs. Chicago White Sox.
Luis Guerrero (Boston) vs. Chicago White Sox.
Seth Johnson (Philadelphia) at Miami.
Lake Bachar (Miami) vs. Philadelphia.
Isaac Collins (Milwaukee) vs. Colorado.
September 10, 2024
Eric Wagaman (Los Angeles Angels) at Minnesota.
Sean Burke (Chicago White Sox) vs. Cleveland.
Thomas Saggase (St. Louis) vs. Cincinnati.
September 12, 2024
Andrew Walters (Cleveland) vs. Tampa Bay.
Kumar Rocker (Texas) at Seattle.
September 13, 2024
Brandon Lockridge (San Diego) at San Francisco.
September 14, 2024
Zach Penrod (Boston) at New York Yankees.
Luisangel Acuña (New York Mets) at Philadelphia.
September 15, 2024
Gustavo Campero (Los Angeles Angels) vs. Houston.
September 16, 2024
Nick Yorke (Pittsburgh) at St. Louis.
September 17, 2024
Jake Eder (Chicago White Sox) at Los Angeles Angels.
September 24, 2024
Edgardo Henriquez (Los Angeles Dodgers) vs. San Diego.
September 25, 2024
Kevin Alcántara (Chicago Cubs) at Philadelphia.
Jackson Jobe (Detroit) vs. Tampa Bay.
September 28, 2024
Mike Burrows (Pittsburgh) at New York Yankees.
Dustin Harris (Texas) at Los Angeles Angels.
Marc Church (Texas) at Los Angeles Angels.
September 29, 2024
Trevor McDonald (San Francisco) vs. St. Louis.
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