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King

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  1. Injuries? He had a bum knee as well as a concussion, the knee injury he's played through.
  2. You can do better than this, jaysfan2014. Look past his ERA!
  3. Angel Perdomo, LHP, Toronto Blue Jays (Low-A Lansing) Perdomo intrigues from the start as a left-hander with a 6-foot-6 frame. He gets a great extension helping the fastball play up, and his ability to get downhill pairs well with the hard arm-side run he features. His fastball didn't come without blemishes though, from the start of the game he had issues with consistency and command, and towards the end of his outing he was incapable of holding his velocity, dropping from the low 90s to as low as 86. His slider was also inconsistent in shape and command, showing nice sweeping action at its best. His changeup is a complete work in progress, and he has a significant need for reps with it, as he doesn't differentiate it well enough from the rest his current repertoire. Though, as many will note I likely saw him on a bad day, Perdomo still looked the part as a lanky lefty with a lot to like. His long delivery isn't a huge issue, and not nearly of as much concern as his propensity to fall off line when he finishes. —Grant Jones
  4. I assume you're scouting the error line but his defense was always highly regarded coming up the system. Though I would wait and see since scouting reports on defense are for the most part erratic.
  5. Shortstop all the way
  6. http://i.imgur.com/eenc4Nx.png http://i.imgur.com/QQMPeOo.png http://i.imgur.com/t2iG110.png The Bisons won both games of a double-header on Sunday, besting the Pawtucket Red Sox 5-2 in game one, and 2-1 in game two. After Saturday night's rainout, which was the first weather-related cancellation at Coca-Cola Field this season, the Bisons and PawSox met for two seven-inning contests on Sunday. The weather cooperated, as the Herd ends the day back at the .500 mark, at 61-61. Game one Buffalo beat the Red Six in the early contest, with the Bisons' bats coming alive for a 5-2 victory. Domonic Brown and Ryan Goins each had two hits in game one, with every Bisons' batter besides Andy Burns and Erik Kratz reaching base at least once. The Herd took an early 2-0 lead in the bottom of the first. Facing Pawtucket's starter Sean O'Sullivan, Dalton Pompey took the second pitch of the bottom of the inning deep for a solo-home run. Dominic Brown followed Pompey's third homer of the season with a RBI-single over the head of shortstop Deven Marrero. Buffalo added two more runs in the second inning. Ryan Goins plated Erik Kratz for his second hit of the ballgame, and Jesus Montero drove in a rehabbing Ezequiel Carrera to make it 4-1 Bisons. In the third, a single off the bat of Casey Kotchman added another run on the scoreboard for the Herd. "[We] got to O'Sullivan early," Bisons' manager Gary Allenson said of his lineup in game one. "Two [runs] in the first, two in the second, one in the third, and we made it hold up. We made it interesting at the end. It's ever easy." Casey Lawrence stranded a Christian Vazquez double in the first inning, and left two men on base following Deven Marrero's RBI single in the second, which cut the Bisons' lead to 2-1. He retired 11 in a row at one point, until a Chris Young double in the sixth. Young scored on a double by Bryce Brentz, making it 5-2, and was removed after a line of 5.1 innings, six hits, and two earned runs. He improves to 4-4 on the year. "How [Lawrence] started his Triple-A career here with us, a spot-start here and there., it almost looked like he didn't belong," Allenson said of starter Casey Lawrence. "He's gotten past that point. He gave up a run early and was in a jam, and did a great job working out of it, and he showed he belongs here." Sean O'Sullivan walked a pair of batters in the fourth, but induced Jesus Montero into an inning-ending double play. After issuing his sixth walk of the game with two outs in the fifth, he was relieved by Roman Mendez. The PawSox reliever fanned Ryan Goins looking with a runner on third in the sixth, his third strikeout in relief on the day. Danny Barnes, rejoining the Herd after his first stint in the majors earlier in August, stranded the bases loaded in the sixth. Things got dicey in the bottom of the seventh for Barnes, who earned his third save of the season. Dalton Pompey dropped a deep-fly ball in right-centerfield with one out, allowing Marco Hernandez to reach third base. A walk to Christian Vazquez and a hit-by-pitch of rehabbing outfielder Chris Young loaded the bags. Barnes bared down, striking out the final two hitters of the game. "Obviously, it was a little crazy today," Barnes said of his outing. "I didn't have really good command of my fastball, but thankfully, I had it with all other pitches, so it ended up working out all right." "I think with Barnes; he was a little rusty," Allenson said of Barnes. "He hadn't pitched in four or five days. That's not like him. He's usually spotting his stuff pretty good." Barnes appeared in his first game with the Herd since being optioned by Toronto on Aug. 10. He holds a 0.47 ERA in 13 games with Buffalo this year. Ezequiel Carrera patrolled left field for the second straight night in a rehab assignment with the Herd. He went 1-3 with a triple and a walk, coming off his first game on Friday, when he went 0-4, striking out swinging three times. "I told him, if you don't get a hit here, you're not going up," Allenson jokingly said of his pep-talk to Carrera, shortly before his triple. "Thank god he listened to me." Bisons' first baseman and defensive wiz Casey Kotchman made a few noteworthy plays in the field. First, he laid out to his left in the third inning, robbing Christian Vazquez of potential extra bases. Then in the fourth, he quickly ran down a popup near the Bisons dugout, making a basket catch on a ball off the bat of Bryce Brentz. http://i.imgur.com/EaBbnYr.png http://i.imgur.com/1Dfzmlb.png http://i.imgur.com/ojO4LWR.png Game two The Bisons bested the PawSox in game two, needing only two runs on four this to sweep Sunday's doubleheader. The Herd's 2-1 victory was led by a strong start by Scott Copeland, and RBI by Ryan Goins and Jio Mier. Just like in game one, the Herd scored in the bottom of the first to take an early advantage. Fresh off a two-hit game earlier in the day, Ryan Goins plated Dalton Pompey to make it a 1-0 game. After a leadoff single to begin the ballgame, Bisons' starter Scott Copeland retired nine in a row until an error by first baseman Chris Colabello in the top of the fourth. He faced just one over the minimum through four innings. A leadoff walk in the fifth to Rusney Castillo would come across to score the tying run in the fifth inning, as Mike Miller drove an RBI single to even the game at one. The Herd regained the lead in the bottom of the fifth. Andy Burns walked and stole both second and third base, and came around to score on a sac-fly by Jio Mier. Copeland stranded two runners in the sixth inning, his final frame of work. He now has four straight starts in which he has allowed just one earned run. Copeland yielded just three hits and two walks on Sunday to pick up his second win of the year. "One thing about [Copeland] is that he doesn't panic," Allenson said of his game two starter. "Regardless of whether the first guy gets on base, or he gives up a line hit, or they tie the game, he's a pro out there. He keeps his cool." Dustin Antolin relieved Copeland in the seventh, and made the final inning interesting, much like in game one. Two runners reached base, but a groundout by Marco Hernandez capped off Sunday's double-header sweep. "I had to work through it," Antolin said postgame. "I didn't have my fastball, the speed was there, but my location wasn't, I just had to figure something out." The rehabbing Ezequiel Carrera went hitless in two at bats, walking in the bottom of the sixth. Ryan Goins concludes Sunday with nine multi-hit games as a Bison this year, going a combined 3-6 with two RBI in both games. He has a hit in 17 of his 22 games in Buffalo. PawSox starter William Cuevas pitched 6.0 innings, allowing two earned runs on four hits, striking out just one batter. He falls to 6-6 in 2016. Much like Casey Kotchman in game one, Chris Colabello made a defensive gem in game two at first base. In the top of the first, Colabello dove to his left to spear a line drive by Brennan Boesch, preventing a run from scoring. In the top of the sixth, Dalton Pompey made a running catch in the leftfield corner, tracking down a deep fly ball, again off the bat of Boesch. The Bisons welcome the Rochester Red Wings to Coca-Cola Field on Monday for the beginning of a three-game series. First pitch is set for 7:05 p.m., with Scott Diamond taking the mound for the Herd. BISONS NOTES: Dustin Antolin has allowed one earned run in his last 19 outings, and picks up his 10th save. He joins Ryan Tepera with double-digit saves for the 2016 Bisons. Two relievers with 10 or more saves has not happened in Buffalo since 2008, when Rick Bauer and Bubbie Buzachero saved 15 and 10 games, respectively… Sean O'Sullivan's six walks in game one ties a season high for a start against Buffalo this year. Louisville's Amir Garret issued six free-passes against the Herd on June 22… Dalton Pompey's blast in game one was the third home run to lead off a first inning by a Bison, with Pompey doing it previously on May 10 against Durham. http://i.imgur.com/U2nNb4I.png http://i.imgur.com/2cD660L.png http://i.imgur.com/qHsBKux.png http://i.imgur.com/y3ZkWgN.png http://i.imgur.com/HXYzgiT.png http://i.imgur.com/bUllZ2d.png http://i.imgur.com/RLvvWv5.png DUNEDIN, Fla. - Kyle Martin launched his 16th home run of the season on Sunday, but the Dunedin Blue Jays broke the game open with five runs in the seventh inning to send Clearwater to a 9-2 loss at Florida Auto Exchange Stadium. Clearwater (30-19) drops to 2.5 games back of the first-place Blue Jays (33-17), with 21 left to play. Carlos Tocci led the offense with a four-hit night, while Aaron Brown finished 3-for-5. The Threshers kept it close through the first six frames, but Dunedin broke the game open with a five-spot in the bottom of the seventh. Down 1-0 after one, Clearwater came back to tie it in the second inning. Chace Numata singled to start the frame, extending his hit streak streak to 10-straight games. Martin followed with a deep drive off the higher wall in right for a single, setting up men at the corners with nobody out. Zach Green grounded into a fielder's choice to score Numata and tie the ballgame at one. Dunedin went back in front with a run off Will Morris (7-3) in the second, but Clearwater matched it again in the fourth. Martin unloaded on a 2-0 pitch from Brad Allen, launching a no-doubter that landed on the roof of the Blue Jays' offices down the right field line. The home run was Martin's 16th of the season, and his second in as many days. Matt Dean's solo homer in the bottom half quickly bumped the Blue Jays back ahead, and Anthony Alford's RBI single in the sixth made it 4-2. Morris exited after six innings, allowing four runs on nine hits and a walk. The Threshers will look to earn a split of the two-game set on Monday, when the series wraps up at Bright House Field at 7 p.m. The game will be broadcast live on threshersbaseball.com and the TuneIn app starting at 6:45 p.m. http://i.imgur.com/qBudEah.png http://i.imgur.com/yziP8D9.png http://i.imgur.com/1kwMlJS.png http://i.imgur.com/s5cglLp.png http://www.milb.com/assets/images/4/4/0/189018440/cuts/Jordan_Romano_fc2it9qm_zvhedzz5.jpg COMSTOCK PARK, Mich. - From catcher Justin Atkinson to pitchers Jordan Romano, Tom Robson and Andrew Case, Canadians played key roles in lifting the Lansing Lugnuts (26-23, 62-57) to a 4-2 Sunday matinee victory over the host West Michigan Whitecaps (22-25, 61-53) at Fifth Third Ballpark. The Lugnuts won three of four games from West Michigan, wrapping up the season series with an 11-4 record against their intrastate rival. Lane Thomas broke a scoreless tie with an RBI single off Whitecaps reliever Logan Longwith (Loss, 0-3) in the sixth inning, and Vancouver native Atkinson followed two batters later with a two-run single to center for a 3-0 Lugnuts lead. Thomas added a solo home run two innings later, his seventh roundtripper of the year, putting the Lugnuts ahead 4-0. That left the game in the hands of the trio of hurlers from north of the border, working in concert with catcher Atkinson. Markham, ON, native Romano (Win, 3-2) hurled six impressive innings, holding the Whitecaps to two walks, two singles and no runs, striking out five. Ladner, BC, native Robson followed with 2 1/3 innings, departing in the ninth inning after allowing a pair of runs. St. John, NB, native Case (Save, 6) recorded the final two outs of the game in perfect order, closing up the Lugnuts' seventh win in their last eight games. The Lugnuts return home on Monday, August 15th, opening a seven-game homestand with the first of a four-game series against the Great Lakes Loons. All-Star left-hander Angel Perdomo (3-6, 3.04) gets the start. For more information or to purchase your tickets, call 517-485-4500 or visit lansinglugnuts.com. http://i.imgur.com/6nDOFcC.png http://i.imgur.com/kpmx6vB.png http://i.imgur.com/sFrrUZM.png http://i.imgur.com/WtR4TER.png http://i.imgur.com/Jz44S3u.png http://i.imgur.com/M7Ykuba.png http://i.imgur.com/2S6LALM.png Kings 3 Stars of the Night 1) Anthony Alford: Alford went 2/4 with a home run and a walk. 2) Richard Urena: Urena continued his tear of AA by going 3/5 with a double. 3) Jordan Romano: Romano had a nice start going 6 innings giving up no earned runs while striking out 5. Kings Platinum Arencibia 1) Yennsy Diaz: Diaz got torched for 5 earned runs, 6 hits and 3 walks in 3.1 innings pitched before the rain delay forced the game to be suspended. Francisco Mejia update Hit streak is over at 50 games. http://i.imgur.com/QWobGwp.png
  7. It's about to go down.
  8. He's playing for the Bowmanville Bandits, http://www.leaguelineup.com/player_baseball.asp?url=bowmanvillebandits&playerid=11398070&teamid=5030717 Pitched one appearance on July 24th where he went 5IP 2H 3R 0ER 7BB 9K
  9. Stanton to the disabled list.
  10. Him and JB Woodmsn are opposite players
  11. You should get Todd to enter
  12. Btw... Tyler Olander, the guy who is making few brief appearances for the GCL Blue Jays, is the basketball player we converted to a pitcher. https://jaysjournal.com/2016/04/28/blue-jays-converting-6-foot-10-ncaa-basketball-champion-to-pitcher/ Hidden away in Dunedin, Florida participating in the Toronto Blue Jays extended spring training is a recent signing unlike any other. Tyler Olander comes to the Blue Jays a decorated NCAA athlete, having won Division One national championships in both 2011 and 2014 with the University of Connecticut before playing professionally in Lithuania and Spain. Standing 6-foot-10, Olander immediately becomes one of the tallest players in all of professional baseball. That size was his most imposing trait with the Huskies, where he appeared in 135 games including 59 starts. For the basketball team. Olander had recently come to the realization that his potential in professional basketball was limited, so he decided to contact Andy Baylock, the coach of UConn’s baseball team up until 2003 who just happened to be a family friend. Baylock and Olander have worked to build his mechanics from the ground up, and Baylock, now 77, was immediately impressed with how quickly the tall left-hander adapted. “When I saw how much he wanted this, I said, ‘I’m going to be right there with you,'” he told Dom Amore of the Hartford Courant. After building up to pitching full bullpen sessions after Olander fully overcame a foot fracture he suffered in Spain, Baylock convinced a former player from his UConn coaching days to come take a look at his new project. Toronto Blue Jays pitching coach Pete Walker. “I was cautiously optimistic,” Walker told the Courant. “Because I know Andy Baylock and have so much respect for his knowledge of pitching. And I knew Tyler had played for UConn, played for Jim Calhoun, the national championships, so I knew the work ethic would be there. I was curious.” Olander has reportedly been throwing in the mid-80s with his fastball, a number that will climb as his body familiarizes itself with the motions of the sport, and is also working on a slider. Blue Jays assistant general manager Andrew Tinnish is pleased with the raw pieces Toronto has to work with, and Walker continues to be impressed by his early reports out of Dunedin. “When you look at his size,” Tinnish told Amore, “his athleticism, his competitiveness, the work ethic, he has a fresh arm … it’s a baseball project we were interested in. It was a low-risk, no-brainer.” Tinish is right, given the potential upside for such a minimal investment. These “raw athlete” signings are something more familiar to the National Football League, especially with great tight ends like Tony Gonzalez or Jimmy Graham, both of whom come from basketball backgrounds. The Blue Jays have recently signed a football player of their own in former University of South Florida quarterback Bobby Eveld (formerly a 50th round pick of the New York Mets in 2010). As Major League organizations work to leave no stone unturned in their search for talent, these gifted athletes from other sports with baseball in their background, most likely at a high school level, could become a more common target. All it will take is for one to hit, and there won’t be a team in baseball that doesn’t try to follow. Olander’s maturity and mental approach on the field will be critical as the organization looks move slowly with him. He found himself as the centre of attention for the wrong reasons twice at UConn, once for an arrest in Florida for trespassing while on spring break, the other for a DUI that was eventually dropped due to a lack of evidence. In his new baseball career, Olander is starting from scratch, relatively speaking. If all goes according to plan, he could potentially see some innings in short-season ball later this summer. http://www.nhregister.com/sports/20160618/former-husky-tyler-olander-returns-to-baseball-in-blue-jays-organization He’s a Connecticut native who started for the UConn men’s basketball team and pitched in the Toronto Blue Jays organization. Scott Burrell, right? Well, yes. But Tyler Olander, as well. That’s right, Tyler Olander. Olander, the Mansfield native who won a pair of national championship rings at UConn, has made the switch from fast breaks to fastballs. He has been with the Blue Jays in extended spring training in Dunedin, Florida for the past couple of months. “It’s been a real blessing from God that it’s all happened so fast,” Olander said on Monday, shortly before hopping on a plane back to Dunedin after spending the weekend at his Mansfield home. “I’m in a great place, with great people and great coaches that have helped me out, great trainers. Hopefully, it can continue to work out, I can stay focused and make the most out of this great opportunity.” Of course, the similarities between Burrell and Olander end with their shared UConn and Blue Jays ties. Burrell was a three-sport star at Hamden High who was first-round MLB draft pick (by Seattle in 1989) then a fifth-round pick by Toronto the following year. In fact, he’s the first American athlete to be a first-round selection in two different sports (Charlotte selected him in the opening round of the 1993 NBA draft). Olander, on the other hand, hasn’t played organized baseball since the summer before his freshman year. His freshman year of high school. Burrell tried balancing the two sports while in college, starring for the Huskies in the winter then pitching for the Jays’ minor-league affiliates in the spring and summer. Ultimately, basketball won out, and he wound up playing nine seasons in the NBA. Burrell just finished his first season as head coach at Southern Connecticut State. “It’s easier for him now, because he has one thing on his mind, so it’ll be fun for him,” said Burrell, who doesn’t know Olander personally. “He doesn’t have to worry about schoolwork, basketball. It’s just business now. He did all the hard stuff already. Now, it’s just what goes on on the field.” Of course, that’s not so easy, either, considering Olander dropped baseball after playing in the Eastern Connecticut Amateur Baseball League a decade ago. Two summers ago, after graduating from UConn, he pitched in a few games for the Vernon Orioles of the Greater Hartford Twilight League. But he really started getting serious about his return to baseball this past winter. While playing professional basketball in Spain last August, Olander broke his foot in a preseason game. He returned home and underwent surgery in October. A couple of months later, he called Andy Baylock, the former UConn baseball coach and longtime family neighbor and friend, saying, “Coach, I want to pitch.” Baylock, who coached Olander’s father, Skip, in college and once served as pitching coach for the U.S. national team, worked diligently with Olander twice a week at UConn’s indoor baseball facility over the winter, even while Olander’s right foot was in a boot cast. “He was totally committed,” Baylock reported. “The kid really wants it.” Blue Jays pitching coach Pete Walker, a UConn product and East Lyme native, came up to watch Olander and liked what he saw. Other teams (Detroit, Texas, Seattle) scouted Olander, as well, but it was the Blue Jays that signed him to a contract this past spring. “I knew I wasn’t gonna step on the field and be good, but I was hoping for a team that would give me that chance to work and develop and see the potential in me,” he said. “The Blue Jays saw it.” A 6-foot-10 left-hander who doesn’t throw too hard (high-80s) but throws strikes and has no mileage on his arm at age 23, Olander was deemed worthy of a chance. “He throws downhill, high to low, and keeps it around the knees,” said Baylock. “He pitched out of a set position and is quick to the plate. If he keeps that downward plane, people aren’t gonna run on him. Plus, he’s not gonna back down from anything. He’s played on two national championship teams.” As of early this week, Olander had yet to pitch in any extended spring training games. His surgically-repaired right foot started acting up a couple of weeks after arriving in Dunedin, and he was put on a rehab program for about a month. He just got back to throwing off a mound again about a week ago, and hoped to throw some batting practice and finally get into some games over the next week. He’s also been a leader to the mostly younger players in camp, and has learned a bit from Jays’ all-star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki, who’s been down in extended spring training rehabbing from injury. At some point soon, Olander could be sent out to the Jays’ rookie league affiliate in Bluefield, West Virginia, or to their Class-A short-season team out in Vancouver, British Columbia. “I think definitely now I’d have to come out of the bullpen and be a reliever,” Olander said. “I don’t have the arm endurance to last that long in games. Once I build up that endurance, whatever they want to do, I’ll be happy doing. If I can come in and get lefties out, that would be great. I think they want to see just as much as I do. There’s a lot left up in the air, having not played. I’m working well, progressing well. Now, I need to see where I stand with hitters.” Although Olander’s return to baseball may seem to have come out of the blue, it’s something he talked about frequently over the years at UConn with his four-year roommate and teammate, Niels Giffey. When Giffey heard about Olander signing with the Jays, he texted, “You finally did it, I’m happy for you.” Olander said he received congratulations from DeAndre Daniels, as well. While Olander won’t completely close the door on his basketball career, he says it’s not even on his mind right now. No, he won’t be the next Scott Burrell and play nine seasons in the NBA. But could he be the next Mark Hendrickson? Hendrickson played basketball at Washington State before eventually returning to baseball. A 6-10 lefty who didn’t throw hard, he wound up pitching 10 seasons in the majors – the first two with, you guessed it, the Blue Jays. “If he ever made it happen, it would be a movie,” said Baylock. But the former coach noted that, because of the dedication Olander has shown in his return to baseball, it’s already been a success. “It’s been a fun project for me, because when you have someone who wants it that badly, you want to keep teaching,” said Baylock, who’ll turn 78 next week. “If nothing works out, he’ll be a better man for going through it.”
  13. http://i.imgur.com/00mEVOx.png http://i.imgur.com/evd4lHa.png http://i.imgur.com/U3e0Ws7.png http://i.imgur.com/fpAKICy.png http://i.imgur.com/9PitL6W.png http://www.milb.com/assets/images/1/2/8/171765128/cuts/Rowdy_Tellez_1_640x360_km3t18jm_nnk4cze5.jpg Trenton - Jon Berti had two hits and Rowdy Tellez knocked him in both times, but the Fisher Cats fell 8-2 to Trenton on Saturday night at ARM & HAMMER Park. It took Trenton (76-44) until the ninth inning to record a hit in the series opener on Friday, it took them only a few pitches to record one on Saturday. Shortstop Tyler Wade ripped a lead-off home run for a 1-0 lead. The Thunder then tacked on seven runs in the second inning for an 8-0 lead. Mike Ford hit a three-run homer that chased Fisher Cats starter Jeremy Gabryszwski (7-9). New Hampshire (55-63) relievers John Anderson (3.2 IP), Alonzo Gonzalez (2.2 IP) and Colton Turner (0.1) did not allow a Trenton run for the remainder of the game, allowing only three more hits. New Hampshire's Jon Berti tripled and scored on a groundout by Rowdy Tellez for the first Fisher Cats run in the fourth inning. Berti singled and Tellez doubled for another run in the top of the sixth inning against winning pitcher Ronald Herrera. Herrera (9-7) beat the Fisher Cats for the third time this season. He allowed two runs on six hits in six innings. Matt Wotherspoon went the final three innings to earn his fifth save. For the Fisher Cats, Christian Lopes had two hits, extending a hit-streak to 12 games. Dwight Smith Jr. added a single in the fourth inning to extend his hit streak to 11 games. The Fisher Cats wrap up the roadtrip on Sunday at 5:00 p.m. in Trenton. LHP Shane Dawson (7-4, 3.91) takes the mound for New Hampshire against Thunder LHP Caleb Smith (2-3, 3.52). Bob Lipman has the call on the WGIR Fisher Cats Radio. Network beginning at 4:45 p.m. The Fisher Cats return to Northeast Delta Dental Stadium on Monday, August 15 to start a homestand with the Binghamton Mets. Join us as we begin our Back To School Celebration with a Pencil Bag Giveaway to the first 1,000 kids. For tickets, visit www.nhfishercats.com. http://i.imgur.com/ao1RXpw.png http://i.imgur.com/JuUqwAq.png http://i.imgur.com/9pURq9k.png http://i.imgur.com/Q3VZgUZ.png http://i.imgur.com/2A0DF1i.png http://i.imgur.com/Rl9J7Pi.png http://i.imgur.com/fXSrUpk.png This game was suspended on Friday night and picked back up in the 10th on Saturday. ---------- COMSTOCK PARK, Mich. - The Lansing Lugnuts (24-22, 60-56) and West Michigan Whitecaps (21-23, 60-51) were suspended due to wet conditions tied at 3-3 following ten innings of play on Friday night at Fifth Third Ballpark. The game will be resumed at 6:00 p.m. Saturday in West Michigan, with the regularly scheduled game set for nine innings with a 7:00 p.m. start time. The suspension was forced by Lugnuts reliever Jackson Lowery, who struck out West Michigan catcher Shane Zeile with the bases loaded to end the tenth inning. Lane Thomas gave the Lugs a 1-0 lead in the first inning with an RBI single off Whitecaps starter Fernando Perez. The 'Caps answered in the second inning, taking a 2-1 lead on a two-run single by Jose Zambrano. The Lugnuts responded promptly in the top of the third inning, tying the game on a Ryan Hissey sacrifice fly and jumping in front on a Connor Panas RBI single. David Gonzalez's sacrifice fly in the fifth knotted the score once more, and led to a slew of scoreless innings to follow. Lansing starter Josh DeGraaf pitched a season-high five innings, allowing eight hits and three runs, walking two and striking out five. He was followed by a sterling performance from Tayler Saucedo, who notched 4 2/3 scoreless frames in relief before yielding to Lowery for the final out in the tenth inning. The next Lugnuts home game is on Monday, August 15th, opening a seven-game homestand. For more information or to purchase your tickets, call 517-485-4500 or visit lansinglugnuts.com. http://i.imgur.com/b2kPtGx.png http://i.imgur.com/XFnzmQd.png http://i.imgur.com/XcmkYsf.png http://i.imgur.com/vsi3ZBQ.png http://i.imgur.com/FA8hfw8.png http://i.imgur.com/PRoDQkX.png http://i.imgur.com/zAqetdw.png http://i.imgur.com/pUjvKf7.png http://i.imgur.com/uezqoDd.png http://i.imgur.com/d4zSZq3.png http://i.imgur.com/QvjJujz.png http://i.imgur.com/rXArPhJ.png http://i.imgur.com/eKYj3WK.png http://i.imgur.com/s7PBlRd.png http://i.imgur.com/BcXXWlj.png http://i.imgur.com/zP8dFqB.png http://i.imgur.com/kGmiiJa.png http://i.imgur.com/lZuQVWq.png Kings 3 Stars of the Night 1) Luis Santos: Santos pitched 6 strong innings giving up only 2 earned runs while striking out 7. 2) Justin Maese: Maese is starting to find his groove in Lansing as he pitched 6.1 innings striking out 6. 3) Vladimir Guerrero Jr: Vlad went 3/5 with 3 singles and 3 runs batted in. Kings Platinum Arencibia 1) Jeremy Gabryszwksi: Gab got torched for 8 earned runs in 1.1 innings pitched. Francisco Mejia update: 1/4 with a double. 50 games! The official ruling was an error, but after the game it was changed to a double. MiLB.comVerified account ‏@MiLB 4m4 minutes ago East Brunswick, NJ BREAKING: Official scorer changes error to double, giving Francisco Mejia a 50-game hitting streak.
  14. Could you push this through manually when J4L19 confirms? I don't think Yahoo does 3 ways. And thanks! edit: We are dropping Jordy Mercer.
  15. 3 way deal... KingFiller: Brandon Crawford (from J4L19) Abom: Tyson Ross (from Kingfiller), Cal Quantrill (from J4L19) J4L19: Jordan Patterson (from Abom), Brandon Moss (from Abom) Abom and J4L19 to confirm.
  16. Confirm Will do similiar deals with Tyson Ross and Alex Wood hit us up
  17. So Tyler Austin and Aaron Judge just went back to back with HRs in both their first MLB at bats. That's kinda cool.
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