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Home Blog Page 8610

Grizzlies’ Ja Morant returns, scores 17 off bench


Memphis star guard Ja Morant returned to action and scored 17 points off the bench during the Grizzlies’ 130-125 home win over the Houston Rockets on Wednesday.

Morant missed the previous nine games, eight due to a suspension for detrimental conduct. He appeared as a reserve for the first time during his four NBA seasons, in his 241st game.

“Once I got out there on the court and seen the fans’ reaction to me being back, it definitely helped me a lot,” Morant said. “Made me feel good inside.”

Memphis coach Taylor Jenkins said pregame that Morant would play slightly over 20 minutes, and the two-time All-Star wound up seeing 24 minutes in which he contributed five assists and four rebounds. Jenkins also said Morant was on board with coming off the bench.

“This was something he brought to the table as well as had been on my mind,” Jenkins told reporters pregame. “So we collectively thought this was the best strategy, at least for the first one or two games. And then we’ll kind of re-evaluate after that.”

The Grizzlies were 6-3 during the nine games Morant missed. Tyus Jones filled in as the point guard and averaged 16.3 points and 8.2 assists, including reaching double digits in assists five times.

Morant was disciplined following his live-streaming of a video on March 4 in which the NBA said Morant “is holding a firearm in an intoxicated state” while at a club in the Denver area following a loss to the Nuggets.

He initially was held out by the Grizzlies before the NBA issued the suspension on March 15. Morant said he spent time in a Florida counseling facility during his time away from basketball.

Morant rejoined the Grizzlies on Monday, but he sat out that night’s home game against the Dallas Mavericks since his conditioning wasn’t up to par.

“Obviously we don’t have a long runway until the end of the regular season, but we want to be smart with that layoff that we’re not doing anything to jeopardize his health,” Jenkins said.

Standout shooting guard Desmond Bane said Morant has the support of his teammates.

“He’s gotta know that it’s not all on him,” Bane said. “He’s got all of us to lean on. Players, coaches, the whole organization has got his back. And I hope the whole city of Memphis does too.”

Morant leads the Grizzlies with averages of 26.9 points and 8.1 assists in 54 games this season.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: 2023 Preview: Chicago White Sox


2022 record: 81-81, second in American League Central

Offseason headlines: One day before turning 78, manager Tony La Russa retired due to health complications rather than try to make a run at a third season managing the White Sox. He missed the final five weeks of the season because of a heart issue. Now the man in charge is Pedro Grifol, former bench coach of the division rival Kansas City Royals. The highest-profile pitcher Chicago signed was right-hander Mike Clevinger, on a one-year deal with an option for 2024. Six weeks after the signing, it was revealed Clevinger was under MLB investigation for allegations of physical, verbal and emotional abuse of the mother of his infant daughter. When the MLB probe concluded, it said no suspension was necessary.

Spring storylines: Primed with young, talented bats and some stellar starters, can this team do what it failed to do under La Russa and win a playoff series? The first step is getting back to the playoffs at all, and to do that they’ll need to remain healthy. Luis Robert, Eloy Jimenez and Tim Anderson all played fewer than 100 games last season; Yoan Moncada played 104. The team is working through supposedly minor injuries during spring training. In January, closer Liam Hendriks announced he was beginning treatment for non-Hodgkin lymphoma. “I’m not going to have a closer,” Grifol said this spring. He will use a committee approach out of the bullpen, with Kendall Graveman, Joe Kelly, Reynaldo Lopez and Jake Diekman all figuring to pitch ninth innings at some point.

Young guns: Rule 5 Draft pick Nick Avila, a right-handed reliever (San Francisco), has yet to make the show but is pushing for a spot in Chicago’s bullpen, which will need all the help it can get. Outfielder Oscar Colas has flashed power during spring training and could reach the big leagues later this year.

Fall feeling: A division title should be in the realm of possibility again for the White Sox, just as it was a wide-open race for much of 2022 before Cleveland sped past Chicago and Minnesota in the home stretch. The club snapped an 11-year postseason drought with consecutive trips in 2020 and 2021; now it hopes to make October baseball a more regular occurrence under new management.

Odds, even: Caesars Sportsbook is more bullish on the White Sox’ chances to win the AL Central, pegging them second at +205, than DraftKings or FanDuel, which has them third at +250 behind both Cleveland and Minnesota.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: Cardinals ace Adam Wainwright (groin) to start season on IL


St. Louis Cardinals right-hander Adam Wainwright will open the season on the injured list with a strained groin.

Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol told reporters Thursday that Wainwright sustained the injury during a weight room workout Tuesday ahead of Team USA’s World Baseball Classic championship game vs. Japan.

Marmol said Wainwright likely will miss “several weeks.”

Wainwright, who sports a 195-117 career record with the Cardinals, has announced that this will be his final season.

Wainwright last pitched Sunday, throwing four innings for Team USA against Cuba in the WBC semifinals.

Wainwright, 41, is a three-time All-Star and two-time Gold Glove winner. He has a career 3.38 ERA in 457 games (390 starts) for the Cardinals.

Jake Woodford, 26, is expected to take Wainwright’s spot in the starting rotation, according to reports. He has 18 strikeouts in 17 2/3 innings this spring.

Woodford has appeared in 65 games (10 starts) for the Cardinals over three seasons, sporting an 8-4 record and 3.61 ERA.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: 2023 Preview: Texas Rangers


Texas Rangers

2022 record: 68-94, fourth in American League West

Offseason headlines: Hard feelings over the outcome of the 2010 World Series are forgotten now that then-Giants manager Bruce Bochy is in the Texas clubhouse. The Rangers lured the 67-year-old skipper out of retirement with a three-year deal in October. Bochy, who won two more rings in 2012 and 2014, left San Francisco after the 2019 season with 2,003 career wins. He will have a rebuilt rotation to work with, anchored by two-time Cy Young winner Jacob deGrom. Texas also signed former All-Star RHP Nathan Eovaldi and LHP Andrew Heaney, traded for former All-Star RHP Jake Odorizzi and retained 2022 All-Star LHP Martin Perez on a one-year, $19.65 million qualifying offer. The Rangers added OF Robbie Grossman but lost lefty reliever Matt Moore to the Angels.

Spring storylines: One year after Texas invested half a billion dollars in signing SS Corey Seager and 2B Marcus Semien, all eyes in the Cactus League were on the pitchers this spring. Looking sharp in his March 19 debut in the desert, deGrom registered four strikeouts in three scoreless innings against the Mariners — twice hitting 100 mph on the radar gun. Odorizzi (arm fatigue) won’t be ready by the opener and OF Leody Taveras (oblique) is a maybe. Southpaw reliever Brett Martin (shoulder) was moved to the 60-day IL on Feb. 17. 1B Nathaniel Lowe had a .936 OPS through 16 spring contests, coming off a Silver Slugger Award-winning season in 2022.

Young guns: Slowed by injuries to his foot in 2021 and shoulder in 2022, 3B Josh Jung (No. 8 overall pick in 2019) is ready to shine after a great spring. RHP Owen White, the club’s top pitching prospect per MLB Pipeline, also looks healthy after 2019 Tommy John surgery and a broken hand in 2021. Second-generation RHP Jack Leiter (No. 2 pick in 2021) soaked up knowledge from special instructor Greg Maddux and pitching coach Mike Maddux this spring.

Fall feeling: Texas lost a ton of games (196) over the past two seasons, but also spent a ton of dough over the past two offseasons to put a winner on the field. With a likely Hall of Famer now calling the shots in Bochy and pitching talent to complement the power of Seager (33 homers in 2022), Lowe (27), OF Adolis Garcia (27) and Semien (26), the Rangers have the pieces in place to give the Astros a scare and make a run at their first championship.

Odds, even: The Rangers haven’t finished better than third in the division since winning back-to-back AL West titles in 2015-16. DraftKings (+850), PointsBet (+900) and FanDuel (+1000) expect the trend to continue in 2023.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: 2023 Preview: Seattle Mariners


Seattle Mariners

2022 record: 90-72, second in American League West

Offseason headlines: After snapping the longest active drought in the four major professional sports and reaching the playoffs for the first time in 21 years, the Mariners were active shoppers. They added All-Star OF Teoscar Hernandez (57 home runs from 2021-22) in a November trade with Toronto and acquired Gold Glove 2B Kolten Wong in a December deal with the Brewers (parting with OF Jesse Winker). In January, they signed two former All-Stars in free agency, bringing aboard OF AJ Pollock and INF Tommy La Stella. “We do feel like we got meaningfully better this offseason and we are a deeper, more complete team than we were at the end of last season,” said Jerry Dipoto, president of baseball operations.

Spring storylines: RHP Chris Flexen and slimmed-down LHP Marco Gonzales battled in the Cactus League for the No. 5 spot in one of the circuit’s best rotations (RHP Luis Castillo, LHP Robbie Ray, RHP George Kirby and RHP Logan Gilbert). “We’ll see how it breaks out,” skipper Scott Servais said in mid-March. “It’s great that we have depth. … I feel very fortunate.” OF Jarred Kelenic had a torrid spring (.410 average with four homers through 15 games) after hitting just .141 in 54 games in 2022. 3B Eugenio Suarez (Venezuela) was one of many Mariners who participated in the WBC. OF Taylor Trammell had surgery in February to repair a broken hamate bone in his right hand.

Young guns: RHP Bryce Miller looked ready during 2023 spring training after averaging 11.0 strikeouts per nine innings and holding hitters to a .195 average at three minor league stops in 2022. C Harry Ford is Seattle’s No. 1 prospect (MLB Pipeline) but is at least two years away from pushing starting backstop Cal Raleigh (27 homers in 2022) for playing time. Kelenic is still only 23 but running out of time to shed the “bust” label.

Fall feeling: A sweep by the eventual World Series champion Astros in the ALDS did not dull the shine on Seattle’s 2022 season. It was the second consecutive
90-win campaign for Servais’ squad, which is primed to make another October charge behind a strong starting rotation, a terrific bullpen and one of the most exciting youngsters in the show in 22-year-old reigning American League Rookie of the Year OF Julio Rodriguez (28 homers, 25 steals).

Odds, even: Seattle hasn’t made back-to-back playoff appearances since 2000-01. The Mariners open with the second-best odds in the AL West, ranging from +320 at DraftKings to +350 at PointsBet to +360 at FanDuel.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: 2023 Preview: Oakland Athletics


Oakland Athletics

2022 record: 60-102, fifth in American League West

Offseason headlines: With their lease at the 57-year-old Coliseum expiring after the 2024 season, talks about the franchise’s possible relocation to Las Vegas heated up again this offseason. The team continues to explore putting a new stadium in Oakland, but another 102-loss campaign like 2022 (its worst since going 54-108 in 1979) won’t exactly build excitement in the Bay Area. In free agency, the A’s signed infielder/outfielders Aledmys Diaz and Jace Peterson to two-year deals. Oakland also signed 28-year-old Japanese RHP Shintaro Fujinami in January and he’ll start the season in the rotation. Other newcomers include veteran reliever Trevor May, LHP Kyle Muller, 1B/DH Jesus Aguilar and outfielders Esteury Ruiz and JJ Bleday.

Spring storylines: Cactus League highlights included a heated battle at the hot corner between newcomer Peterson and natural shortstop Kevin Smith, and RHP Adam Oller showing much-improved command and making a surprising push for a rotation spot. “This is probably the best Adam has thrown the ball,” manager Mark Kotsay said in late February. On the injury front, 2022 All-Star and potential Opening Day starter RHP Paul Blackburn (finger) and backup C Manny Pina (left wrist inflammation) will begin the season on the shelf. 1B/OF Seth Brown was limited this spring with shoulder soreness.

Young guns: Oakland’s top three prospects are all expected to contribute in 2023. 1B/C Tyler Soderstrom had 29 homers and 105 RBIs across three levels last season, finishing the year at Triple-A Las Vegas. LHP Ken Waldichuk is a rotation candidate after fanning 33 batters in 34 2/3 innings with the A’s last season. 2B/3B Zack Gelof, a 2021 second-rounder, will likely begin in Vegas where he homered five times in nine games in 2022.

Fall feeling: Only the most diehard fans are hopeful that last season’s finish in the AL cellar was just a fluke. Sure, Oakland made six playoff appearances in the previous 10 campaigns, but trading arguably your best player in C Sean Murphy (to the Braves in December) handcuffs Kotsay and will likely see him listed as a favorite on many “first manager to be fired” betting predictions.

Odds, even: Another season with triple-digit losses is in the forecast for talent-strapped Oakland, which faces some of the longest division-title odds in MLB at +20000 (PointsBet) and +25000 (DraftKings, FanDuel).

–Field Level Media

MLB News: 2023 Preview: Los Angeles Angels


Los Angeles Angels

2022 record: 73-89, third in American League West

Offseason headlines: The Angels gave skipper Phil Nevin a one-year contract after compiling a 46-60 record on an interim basis after the June firing of Joe Maddon. “The guys in the clubhouse trust and rely on him,” slugger Mike Trout said. Added two-way star Shohei Ohtani: “Players were with him and gave him all their best.” 1B/DH Albert Pujols officially retired with 703 home runs, 2,218 RBIs and 3,384 hits over 22 seasons. Free agency saw the Angels add some versatile, veteran bats with 3B/SS Gio Urshela and INF/OF Brandon Drury. OF Hunter Renfroe joined his fifth team in five years but has 60 homers the past two seasons. Former Dodgers LHP Tyler Anderson signed a 3-year, $39 million deal. Reliever Carlos Estevez and RHP Michael Lorenzen also arrived via free agency.

Spring storylines: The World Baseball Classic served up quite the appetizer for postseason-starved Angels fans, whose team has the division’s longest active playoff drought (2014): Ohtani and Trout playing for a title on March 21, albeit on opposite teams as Ohtani fanned Trout swinging to end Japan’s 3-2 win against Team USA. Having played just 157 games over three seasons since signing a $245 million deal in December 2019, 3B Anthony Rendon looked healthy this spring with a .444 average, two homers and eight RBIs in his first 11 exhibition games. LHP Reid Detmers excelled in Cactus League action and is a popular choice among Anaheim insiders for a breakout season.

Young guns: The organization’s top prospect is C Logan O’Hoppe, who arrived in trade that sent Brandon Marsh to the Phillies last August. If he doesn’t replace Max Stassi by Opening Day, his bat will find its way into the Halos’ lineup soon. RHP Ben Joyce only has 13 innings in the minors, but his 105-mph fastball will play at any level. SS Zach Neto, L.A.’s first-round pick (13th overall) in 2022, is likely to spend a full season in the minors.

Fall feeling: With reigning MVP Ohtani playing perhaps his last season and three-time MVP Trout turning 32 in August, there will never be a better time for the Angels to win their first World Series since 2002. Ohtani signed a one-year, $30 million deal to avoid arbitration after tallying 34 homers, 95 RBIs, 15 wins, a 2.33 ERA and 219 Ks. If the megastars can channel their WBC success, October could be in play.

Odds, even: Despite employing the planet’s two best players, the Angels are +550 to win the American League West at FanDuel. PointsBet (+650) and DraftKings (+750) also place them behind Houston and Seattle.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: 2023 Preview: Houston Astros


Houston Astros
2022 record: 106-56, first in American League West

Offseason headlines: Manager Dusty Baker re-upped for another season soon after Houston beat Philadelphia to win its second World Series in six years. Not standing pat, the Astros signed 2020 American League MVP 1B Jose Abreu to a three-year contract and claimed former Toronto reliever Matt Gage off waivers. Abreu’s power totals dipped last season but he still batted .304 with 40 doubles for the White Sox. Yes, Houston lost Cy Young winner Justin Verlander to the Mets, but it re-signed OF Michael Brantley (one year) and setup man Rafael Montero (three years) and inked No. 2 starter RHP Cristian Javier to an extension through 2027. DH Yordan Alvarez didn’t make his spring debut until March 23 due to an injured left hand.

Spring storylines: Eight-time All-Star 2B Jose Altuve needed surgery to repair a broken right thumb after being hit by a pitch while playing for Puerto Rico at the World Baseball Classic. Initial reports said the three-time batting champ would be out 8-10 weeks, returning sometime in May. A strong spring by LHP Framber Valdez confirmed he is ready to replace Verlander in the No. 1 role. RHP Lance McCullers Jr. injured his elbow in mid-February and won’t be ready by Opening Day. Neither will Brantley (shoulder). 3B Alex Bregman returned from a broken left index finger sustained in Game 6 of the World Series and looks to return to his 2018-19 All-Star form.

Young guns: RHP Hunter Brown, the No. 1 prospect in the Astros’ system per MLB Pipeline, is expected to fill in during McCullers’ absence. Brown was 2-0 with a 0.89 ERA in seven games (two starts) in a call-up late last season after earning Pacific Coast League Pitcher of the Year honors. Catching prospects Korey Lee and Yanier Diaz could both push 36-year-old starter Martin Maldonado (.600 OPS in 2022) for playing time.

Fall feeling: The 73-year-old Baker managed 25 seasons before winning his first World Series, beating the Phillies in six games last autumn. Unless Altuve winds up missing extended time and Houston struggles to replace his bat and leadership, the veteran skipper’s wait for a second title (and third straight pennant) will be much shorter.

Odds, even: The defending champs are picked to win the American League West for the third straight season and sixth time in seven years (-175 at DraftKings and -185 at FanDuel). Most sites have Houston as a +600 favorite to repeat in the World Series.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: Relaxed Shohei Ohtani enters contract year off WBC success


With his heroic effort complete, a world title secured and his team in the throes of a wild celebration, Shohei Ohtani turned away from the glee to pay respect to his vanquished opponent.

A simple bow, followed by a wave, face stern, eyes forward.

Between the lines, Ohtani carries powers and abilities outside the norm. Removed from the confines of nine innings, he shows the modesty of a superhero’s alter ego.

As Japan’s euphoria was in full roar following a team and a one-on-one duel the baseball world craved, Ohtani turned to the dugout of the defeated United States team for his salute.

The gesture seemed part recognition of Los Angeles Angels teammate Mike Trout, whom he just struck out swinging to give his native Japan the World Baseball Classic title. It also read like appreciation toward a dugout full of MLB stars, who have been foils in his path to a unique level of baseball stardom.

“For one day, let’s throw away our admiration for them and just think about winning,” Ohtani said in a pregame speech to his Japanese teammates.

What followed was Japan’s 3-2 championship victory and Ohtani getting through friend and teammate Trout to do it, and as a closer no less. On offense, he had a hit and a walk in the title game and batted .435 in the tournament to earn MVP honors.

“Just looking at the great lineup of the great players … I mean, obviously, we have respect, but at the same time, it looks like we might be beaten down,” Ohtani said afterward through an interpreter, on the comparison of talent. “So just forget about those kind of feelings. We’re just even. We have to just beat them. I just wanted to bring that feeling amongst us.”

Whether with the Angels over the past five seasons, or with Team Japan for three weeks this spring, Ohtani keeps setting a comic-book standard for the heights a baseball player can reach.

Nobody can command his popularity in the sport worldwide, and nobody has ever been able to merge elite-level pitching with superior hitting without trying to sacrifice one for the other.

Ohtani is as skillful as he is hard to define. He has been considered a once-in-a-generation talent, but no generation has seen this before, not even in Babe Ruth’s time. Eventually, Ruth stopped pitching in order to become a transcendent hitter.

And Ohtani really isn’t redefining the game either because it would take more than a development strategy or dogged determination from a young age in order to fashion a single player who can pitch and hit at an All-Star level.

This is something entirely new, and because of it, Ohtani could see a half-billion-dollar payday before Opening Day 2024 arrives. The 28-year-old superstar is due to become a free agent next winter.

“The first day I met him. he was great, a super nice guy,” said the St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Lars Nootbaar, the first player born outside of Japan to suit up for the country in the WBC, with the California native eligible because of his Japanese mother. “That was the first thing that popped out to me was he was so welcoming.

“But then he threw a bullpen, probably hit 100 (mph), and then we went in the (batting) cage. He was hitting balls 118 (mph). First (WBC) game, hits two home runs, and then I watch him squat 400, 500 pounds. There’s things that you’re like, ‘Well, you can’t make this up.’ He gets off the squat rack, and then he’s joking around. It’s (inhuman) stuff. I’ve never, obviously, seen anything like it, and (then) for him to be a humble and genuine guy.”

An 2021 American League MVP and an AL All-Star in each of the past two seasons as both a hitter and pitcher, Ohtani was expected to thrive on the WBC stage. The fact that he did, winning both of his starts to go along with a save in three outings, has raised his soaring profile, as well as the anticipation that he will become the game’s highest-paid player.

Ohtani already set a record for the largest-ever raise for an arbitration-eligible player, when he agreed to a one-year, $30 million contract for the upcoming season. That is up from the $5.5 million he earned last season.

With his arbitration-eligible years complete after this season, Ohtani is set to hit the open market unless the Angels can cut him off with an extension. No matter what happens, the first $50 million-per-season contract could be ahead.

If it sounds unfathomable, the reality is that Ohtani is two elite players wrapped into one. He finished fourth in AL Cy Young Award voting last year and missed out on his second-consecutive MVP season only because Aaron Judge put on a historic power performance in 2022.

There was conjecture that Ohtani should have been the MVP anyway, even with Judge’s 62 home runs, 131 RBIs and 1.111 OPS. Ohtani had 34 home runs, 95 RBIs and an .875 OPS on offense and was 15-9 with a 2.33 ERA in 28 starts on the mound. He had the fourth-best ERA among AL starters, and he struck out the third-most batters in the league (219).

Who ends up giving Ohtani a potential $500 million deal remains to be seen. The New York Yankees, Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants all are expected to be big players in the bidding.

Angels owner Arte Moreno was expected to sell the team but had second thoughts. He might look to bring back Ohtani on a long-term deal in a move that could enhance the sale price.

An Angels return to the postseason might also help the bottom line, although the real benefit would be in the perception of a franchise that has played in just three playoff games during the 12-year Trout era. The Angels lost all three of those games.

While Ohtani struck out Trout on one of his best sliders to give Japan the WBC title, each player showed he can lead a team when the stakes are high. But it hasn’t happened on the major league level with the Angels, whose last winning season came in 2015.

Even with so much on the line for Ohtani in 2023, in a contract year and with the known desire to play more games of significance, the global star has appeared relaxed this spring while still exuding confidence.

Changes are coming, though. Ohtani plans on using a PitchCom device this season to send his pitch selections to the catcher instead of the other way around. If the added responsibility, not to mention the new pitch clock rules, is bothering him, Ohtani isn’t showing it.

“It’s the same one for everyone,” Ohtani said just before leaving for the WBC, dismissing the concept that the pitch clock could be a detriment to his mound success. “Everyone has to adjust. But so far so good. I feel like I’m being a little bit rushed, but I think as long as I get games under my belt, I should be fine.”

Asked about where he was wearing his PitchCom device earlier this spring, he played it coy.

“It’s a good sign that you guys don’t know,” Ohtani said, drawing laughs.

Even superheroes have secrets to keep, after all. There is a level of the unknown that adds to a sense of invincibility. A wink and a smile can throw off the scent of a cold-blooded nature.

Ohtani has managed to master the art better than anybody before him, and his greatest mission still could be ahead.

–By Doug Padilla, Field Level Media

MLB News: Spring training roundup: Angels’ Mickey Moniak homers twice


Mickey Moniak slammed two homers and drove in six runs as the Los Angeles Angels won a slugfest with the Colorado Rockies 10-9 on Wednesday in a spring training game in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Left fielder Moniak, who also doubled in going 3-for-3, hit a 421-foot shot in the second inning and a 384-foot homer in the sixth.

Jared Walsh (2-for-2, two RBIs, two runs) and Luis Rengifo hit one homer apiece for the Angels, while Anthony Rendon went 2-for-3 with two runs and a double.

The Rockies had more hits, 12-11, including home runs from Elias Diaz and Ezequiel Tovar (2-for-3, three RBIs, two runs).

Nationals 5, Yankees 2

Dominic Smith went 3-for-4 with a double, home run and three RBIs as Washington topped New York in Palm Beach, Fla.

Nationals left-hander MacKenzie Gore went six scoreless innings, allowing two hits and one walk with eight strikeouts.

Oswaldo Cabrera (2-for-3) was the only Yankees batter with multiple hits as the team totaled six.

Rays 6, Phillies 2

Left-hander Jeffrey Springs fanned eight batters while allowing two hits in 4 1/3 scoreless innings and Tampa Bay pitchers totaled 14 strikeouts in a win over Philadelphia in St. Petersburg, Fla.

Grant Witherspoon had a two-run single in the fifth inning for the Rays, and teammate Brandon Lowe went 2-for-2 with one RBI and one run.

The Phillies’ Kody Clements went 2-for-3 with a two-run double.

Braves 5, Tigers 3

Leadoff hitter Orlando Arcia went 2-for-3 with a 426-foot, three-run homer and four RBIs as Atlanta downed Detroit in Lakeland, Fla.

Sam Hilliard went 3-for-3 with an RBI double, and Forrest Wall, Magneuris Sierra and Joe Hudson had two hits apiece for the Braves.

The Tigers’ Ryan Kreidler was 2-for-3 with one RBI, and starting pitcher Matt Manning scattered six hits with one unearned run and two walks and six strikeouts over four innings.

Blue Jays 2, Orioles 1

Bo Bichette and Daulton Varsho homered to power Toronto over Baltimore in Dunedin, Fla.

Leadoff hitter Terrin Vavra went 2-for-4 with a homer for the Orioles’ lone run of the game as they outhit the Blue Jays 8-4. Teammates Kyle Stowers and Nomar Mazara had two hits apiece.

Astros 5, Mets 2

Corey Julks hit a two-out, bases-loaded double to drive in three runs as Houston beat New York in Port St. Lucie, Fla.

The four-run fifth inning for the Astros featured David Hensley drawing a bases-loaded walk to score Justin Dirden and bring Julks to the plate.

Luis Guillorme (2-for-3), Omar Narvaez (2-for-2) and Tomas Nido (2-for-2) each had two hits for the Mets.

Cardinals 0, Marlins 0

Five St. Louis pitchers and four Miami counterparts each combined for shutouts in Sarasota, Fla.

Cardinals starter Jordan Montgomery allowed six hits and no walks with one strikeout in five innings. The left-hander was followed by Ryan Helsley, Jordan Hicks, Andre Pallante and Drew VerHagen, who worked one inning apiece and yielded a total of one hit.

Trevor Rogers started for the Marlins and in five innings gave up three of the Cardinals’ five hits. Matt Barnes (one inning), Robert Garcia (1 2/3) and Dylan Floro (1 1/3) completed the shutout.

Rangers (ss) 2, White Sox (ss) 0

Jackson Frazier homered as Texas shut out Chicago in a split-squad game at Surprise, Ariz.

The White Sox scored their second run when Ezequiel Duran tripled and pinch runner Jax Biggers came home on Jose Ruiz’s balk.

Chicago’s Oscar Colas was 2-for-3 with a double.

Cubs 4, Athletics 2

Cody Bellinger, Edwin Rios and Christopher Morel homered to power Chicago past Oakland in Mesa, Ariz.

Rios and Morel now each have four home runs this spring, and Bellinger two.

The Athletics’ Jesus Aguilar went 3-for-3 with a double and home run, and Esteury Ruiz went 2-for-2 with his 14th RBI of the spring.

Royals 4, White Sox (ss) 3

Dairon Blanco and Tyler Gentry hit solo home runs and Kansas City edged a Chicago split squad in Glendale, Ariz.

Yolbert Sanchez drove in runs for the White Sox on a sacrifice fly in the fifth and an RBI single in the seventh.

Giants 4, Rangers (ss) 0

Four San Francisco pitchers scattered 10 hits over nine scoreless innings to defeat a Texas split squad in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Starter Ross Stripling went 4 2/3 innings for the Giants and allowed six hits and no walks with four strikeouts. Scott Alexander (one inning), Jakob Junis (2 1/3) and Taylor Rogers (one) completed the shutout.

Bryce Johnson hit an RBI double and Blake Sabol went 2-for-3 for San Francisco. Marcus Semien, Corey Seager and Jonah Heim each went 2-for-4 for Texas.

Twins 11, Red Sox 0

Trevor Larnach homered and doubled among his four hits, Kyle Farmer and Jose Miranda also went deep as Minnesota defeated host Boston in Fort Myers, Fla.

Twins starter Joe Ryan struck five in five scoreless innings. Emilio Pagan and Cole Sands followed with two scoreless innings apiece, with Sands striking out three.

Red Sox starter Tanner Houck surrendered eight runs and 10 hits in 4 2/3 innings.

Reds 4, Padres 1

Right-hander Graham Ashcraft struck out 10 in six shutout innings, allowing only one hit, as host Cincinnati defeated San Diego in Goodyear, Ariz.

TJ Friedl had two hits and Tyler Stephenson and Curt Casali each drove in a run for the Reds.

Brett Sullivan had one of the Padres’ three hits and knocked in their only run.

Mariners 5, Dodgers 1

Julio Rodriguez, last season’s American League Rookie of the Year, hit two doubles and drove in three runs as host Seattle knocked off Los Angeles in Peoria, Ariz.

Former Dodgers outfielder AJ Pollock had a double among two hits and scored twice. Mariners right-hander George Kirby struck out nine and walked one in five no-hit, scoreless innings.

Miguel Vargas drove in the only run for the Dodgers, who managed just two hits.

–Field Level Media