Top News:
Peter Abraham / The LoHud Yankees Blog:
Why wasn't Joba in? Depends who you ask — Joe Girardi said that Joba Chamberlain wasn't available because he pitched two innings on Thursday. What was left unsaid is that Chamberlain is injured. — Chamberlain has not physically been in the bullpen for two days as he receives treatment …
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Tyler Kepner / Bats:
The Good and the Bad From a Loss to the Indians — First, the good stuff from the Yankees' 4-3 loss to the Cleveland Indians: — Johnny Damon is heating up (.394) on this road trip. ... Alberto Gonzalez is quickly becoming one of my favorite Yankees to watch.
Associated Press:
Pirates release struggling right-hander Morris — PITTSBURGH — Matt Morris, the veteran right-hander added by the Pittsburgh Pirates late last season to stabilize a young rotation, was released Sunday after failing to pitch past the second inning in his latest start.
Discussion:
MLB Rumors
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Dejan Kovacevic / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:
Morris, Pirates could be parting ways — Van Benschoten to be recalled after 8-4 loss to Phillies — The Matt Morris matter, one way or another, should come to a head today. — The Pirates will recall starter John Van Benschoten from Class AAA Indianapolis this morning and, thus, must make another move to clear roster space.
Derrick Goold / St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
Heated rivalry nears boiling point — Houston's interpretation of Adam Wainwright's message fastball thrown behind the back of catcher Brad Ausmus on Saturday was about as subtle as the pitch itself. — “I thought it was intentional, yes,” Ausmus said. “Wainwright shook …
Discussion:
Baseball Musings
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Jeff Passan / Yahoo! Sports:
Count on it — ST. LOUIS - Adam Wainwright just had thrown 126 pitches, and his right arm did not fall off. It hung unencumbered, Wainwright eschewing standard postgame procedure where starting pitchers mummify their throwing arms in ice packs. He prefers going au natural with his appendage …
Wayne Coffey / NY Daily News:
Davey Johnson tells of Mets days, steroids and Olympic dreams — The manager of the U.S. Olympic baseball team is a familiar, craggy-faced man whose life has known soaring triumph and unspeakable tragedy and who, across five decades in locales ranging from Baltimore to Atlanta, Tokyo to Flushing, has had a diamond life like few others.
The Journal News:
Baseball beat: Hall of Famer Palmer a big fan of Yankees' young pitchers — in focus, by peter abraham — Jim Palmer was 19 when the Orioles called him up to the majors in 1965, and he became a full-time starter a season later. He can relate to the experiences Phil Hughes and Ian Kennedy …
Nick Cafardo / Boston Globe:
The man behind Manny — Agent Boras discusses the change in Ramírez — We start our report this week with a few questions for agent Scott Boras regarding the change in Manny Ramírez's personality, his conditioning, his desire to play at least four more years …
Discussion:
MLB Rumors
Anthony Rieber / Newsday:
Mets' Molina not related to catching's 1st family — Gustavo Molina, who made his Mets debut yesterday, is not one of the catching Molina brothers. — Please stop asking. — “Everywhere I go, I get that question,” Molina said before going 1-for-3 with a walk in the Mets' 4-3 win over the Braves.
Akron Beacon Journal:
Tribe's cash flow better under Dolans — Forbes values franchise 15th in major leagues — Forbes Magazine has calculated that the Indians are worth $417 million, making the franchise the 15th most valuable in the major leagues. — So what? Why should a fan in Stow or Wooster or Medina care?
Rick Eymer / MLB.com:
Volquez emerging as top-flight pitcher — Cincinnati (10-15) at San Francisco (11-14), Sun., 4:05 p.m. ET — SAN FRANCISCO — The last time Edinson Volquez matched up with Barry Zito, both pitchers were in the American League and Zito was the dominating pitcher.
Discussion:
Redleg Nation