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Braves Select Hayden Harris, Designate Wander Suero

By Steve Adams | September 2, 2025 at 9:47am CDT

The Braves announced Tuesday that they’ve selected the contract of left-handed pitching prospect Hayden Harris from Triple-A Gwinnett. Righty Hunter Stratton was optioned and rightyWander Suero was designated for assignment in a pair of corresponding moves. Atlanta also added infielder Ha-Seong Kim, whom they claimed off waivers from the Rays, to the active roster. Jurickson Profar heads to the paternity list to clear an active roster spot for Kim.

An undrafted free agent out of Georgia Southern in 2022, Harris is a Georgia native who has gone from off the prospect radar entirely to a dominant bullpen arm in the upper minors. He posted mid-4.00 ERAs in 2023 and 2024, his first two full professional seasons, but has erupted with a 0.56 ERA in 48 innings between Double-A and Triple-A this season. In 48 innings, he’s fanned an outrageous 41% of his opponents against a manageable 9% walk rate.

Harris doesn’t have eye-popping velocity, averaging just 91.7 mph on his four-seamer in Triple-A. He’s still posted a huge 14% swinging-strike rate in the minors this year. MLB.com ranks him 27th among Braves prospects, noting that he’s a pure relief prospect without overpowering stuff but nevertheless misses bats with his heater due to a deceptive delivery and plus carry on the pitch.

More to come.

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Atlanta Braves Tampa Bay Rays Transactions Ha-Seong Kim Hayden Harris Hunter Stratton Jurickson Profar Wander Suero

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Shelby Miller Undergoing Testing After Feeling “Pop” In Elbow

By Steve Adams | September 2, 2025 at 9:15am CDT

Brewers reliever Shelby Miller is headed for imaging after an ominous exit from yesterday’s game, writes Adam McCalvy of MLB.com. Milwaukee skipper Pat Murphy said the 34-year-old Miller told the training staff he felt a “pop” in his elbow during yesterday’s outing.

The veteran Miller was a key bullpen pickup for the Brew Crew at last month’s trade deadline, though he came with some health risk, given that he was on the injured list due to a forearm strain at the time of the trade. The cost of acquisition perhaps reflected that. Rather than send any prospects to the D-backs, Milwaukee instead took on Miller’s contract and ate a reported $2MM of the roughly $7MM left on Jordan Montgomery’s contract. Montgomery underwent Tommy John surgery back in March; the Brewers essentially purchased Miller from the Diamondbacks.

It looked like a nice move for Milwaukee at the time. Miller was excellent in a rebound effort with Arizona, tossing 36 1/3 innings of 1.98 ERA ball with a big 28% strikeout rate and a strong 7.7% walk rate. He picked up eight holds and ten saves prior to being flipped to the NL Central leaders.

Miller has pitched 9 2/3 innings with the Brewers and sports an unsightly 5.59 ERA, though that’s a bit misleading. Prior to yesterday’s outing, when he seemingly sustained this injury, he’d pitched in 10 games with the Brewers and held opponents scoreless in eight of them. The main blemish was a three-run hiccup against the Bucs on Aug. 13, but generally, Miller had been strong: a 3.72 ERA with a 14-to-4 K/BB ratio in those 9 2/3 frames. He was tagged for two runs without recording an out yesterday, however.

Bullpen depth has once again been a strength for the Brewers in 2025, but Miller was expected to fill a key role nonetheless. However, Milwaukee also lost closer Trevor Megill (2.54 ERA in 46 innings) and righty Grant Anderson (2.87 ERA in 62 2/3 innings) to the injured list within the past week — the former due to a flexor strain and the latter due to tendinitis in his ankle. Each of Abner Uribe, Jared Koenig, Nick Mears and Aaron Ashby has pitched at least 49 innings with a 3.42 ERA or better, but the relief corps has now lost three notable arms in a span of under two weeks.

Megill suggested at the time of the IL placement that it was more precautionary than concerning — a means of making sure he didn’t push through something minor and jeopardize his availability for the postseason. It’s less clear when or whether Anderson will be able to return, and Miller’s description of his injury is obviously quite concerning. We’ll presumably have more information on Miller sooner than later, but it seems doubtful that all three of Megill, Anderson and Miller will be 100% by the time postseason play begins. Miller, it should be noted, missed the majority of the 2017-18 seasons recovering from Tommy John surgery.

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Milwaukee Brewers Grant Anderson Shelby Miller

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The Opener: Farris, Orioles, Yankees, Astros

By Nick Deeds | September 2, 2025 at 8:33am CDT

Here are three things we’ll be keeping an eye on around the baseball world throughout the day today:

1. Farris to make MLB debut:

The Angels selected the contract of left-hander Mitch Farris yesterday when rosters expanded to 28 players. Farris will make his MLB debut when he takes the ball today against the Royals and veteran right-hander Michael Lorenzen (4.62 ERA). Farris has spent the entire 2025 campaign at Double-A after being acquired from Atlanta in the Davis Daniel trade during the offseason. He has a 4.27 ERA in 116 innings of work at that level to go with an impressive 28.0% strikeout rate. Anaheim has long been aggressive when promoting its prospects, and the 24-year-old Farris will now get the opportunity to impact the big league level before ever setting foot at Triple-A.

2. Orioles 40-man move incoming:

The Orioles are set to welcome Tyler Wells back from the injured list today as they move towards a six-man rotation. With Wells set to start today’s game against Yu Darvish (5.66 ERA in ten starts) in San Diego, Baltimore will need to make a 40-man roster move to accommodate the 31-year-old right-hander’s return from the injured list. That could mean moving an injured player like right-hander Colin Selby to the 60-day injured list. If they’re confident all of their players on the 10- or 15-day IL can make it back before season’s end, the O’s could designate someone from the back end of their 40-man roster for assignment.

3. Series Preview: Yankees @ Astros

A potential postseason preview is set to begin today when the Yankees kick off a three-game set against the Astros in Houston. The series starts with an exciting pitching matchup: southpaw Framber Valdez (3.18 ERA) takes the mound for the Astros as the Yankees counter with fellow lefty Max Fried (3.06 ERA). Fried has struggled for much of the second half but will look to keep the good times rolling after back-to-back quality starts against the Red Sox and Nationals. Tomorrow’s game will feature rookie Will Warren (4.30 ERA) against swingman Jason Alexander (4.61 ERA in 54 1/3 innings), while the series finale will pit Carlos Rodon (3.18 ERA) against Cristian Javier (3.38 ERA in four starts) in the latter’s fifth start back from Tommy John surgery.

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The Opener

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Braves Claim Ha-Seong Kim From Rays

By Darragh McDonald | September 1, 2025 at 11:55pm CDT

The Braves have claimed infielder Ha-Seong Kim off waivers from the Rays, according to announcements from both clubs. Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic reported the claim prior to the official announcements. Atlanta transferred Austin Riley to the 60-day injured list to open a 40-man spot. Riley is done for the season following core surgery.

It wasn’t previously reported that Kim was on waivers, but it seems the Rays quietly put him out there to try to shed his contract. Atlanta obliged, so the Rays will get out from under that deal. Tampa signed him to a two-year, $29MM pact in the winter. He is making $13MM this year, with just under $2MM left to be paid out. The second year is a $16MM player option.

That deal was the Rays betting on Kim being able to play at his usual level after shoulder surgery finished his 2024 campaign. Over the 2022 through 2024 seasons with the Padres, Kim had slashed .250/.336/.385 for a 106 wRC+. He had stolen 72 bases in that span and received strong grades for his defense at second base, third base and shortstop. FanGraphs credited him with 10.5 wins above replacement for that three-year span.

With the surgery, he was expected to be on the injured list to start 2025, which dampened his market. Some argued he was trending towards a nine-figure deal before he got hurt. Instead, he opted for the short-term, opt-out structure. Ideally, it would have worked great for both sides. If Kim had bounced back to his previous levels of performance, he could have taken the shortstop job in Tampa and then opted out. At that point, the Rays could have given him a qualifying offer and received compensation as he returned to the open market in search of a larger guarantee.

It has not played out that way. He was initially reinstated from the IL in early July. Since then, he has twice gone back on the IL due to back problems. Around the IL stints, he has played in 24 games and produced a measly .214/.290/.321 line.

Given that performance and the injury absences, it’s possible that Kim is trending towards triggering his player option. That would have put $16MM on Tampa’s books for next year. That’s not a massive sum and the Rays have very little committed to next year’s club, but they are also dealing with plenty of uncertainty.

Due to the hurricane damage to Tropicana Field, they have had to move to George Steinbrenner Field, normally a minor league facility. That move has undoubtedly led to a lot of unforeseen costs and presumably less revenue than usual. Work is still being done to get The Trop ready for 2026 and it’s unclear how that will play out. On top of all that, the franchise is actively being sold and it’s unclear what sort of payroll the new owners will give the front office as they focus on building a new stadium.

It seems they preferred to let Kim go and save some money as opposed to keeping him around and hoping for better results next year. They are 5.5 games out of a playoff spot. They are not totally buried but are likely happy to save the remainder of the money, due to those big-picture questions. They will use the remainder of the regular season to continue giving reps to shortstop prospect Carson Williams. He was promoted when Kim’s most recent IL stint started just over a week ago. Williams has big questions about his penchant for strikeouts but he clearly has power and is considered a strong defender.

Atlanta, however, is in a very different situation. They normally run one of the larger payrolls in the league. They came into 2025 seemingly hoping to duck under the competitive balance tax. Back in February, chairman Terry McGuirk said the club still had some powder dry for in-season moves.

This year has turned into a nightmare season for the club. Due to several injuries and a PED suspension for Jurickson Profar, they fell behind their competitors and were never able to recover. They currently have a 62-75 record and are 11 games back of a playoff spot.

President of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos has been using that dry powder to try to start working on the club’s 2026 comeback season. He acquired Tyler Kinley from the Rockies ahead of the deadline and claimed Jake Fraley off waivers from the Reds. Kinley is making $3MM this year and has a $5MM club option for next year. Fraley is making $3.125MM and will be due a raise via arbitration for 2026, his final season of club control.

Claiming Kim is a similar move but with larger numbers. As mentioned, Kim is making $13MM this year and will make $16MM next year. It’s theoretically possible that Kim gets hot down the stretch and opts out. That would make this claim go for naught, but the club would only lose a bit of money in that scenario. Presumably, they are hoping Kim decides to trigger his option and stay, so it seems they think $16MM is a fine price for betting on a bounceback next year.

It’s an interesting gambit for their middle infield, a situation that MLBTR’s Steve Adams recently took a close look at, in a post for Front Office subscribers. Atlanta has had Nick Allen at shortstop this year. He’s a strong defender but is essentially the worst hitter in the majors by a noticeable margin. Among guys with at least 400 plate appearances this year, Allen’s 53 wRC+ is dead last. Ke’Bryan Hayes is second-last on that list, with a 67 wRC+. Getting another shortstop and bumping Allen into a bench role seemed like a key thing on the to-do list for next year.

However, the offseason options weren’t going to be great. Bo Bichette is going to be the top free agent but Atlanta hasn’t really spent a lot in free agency lately. Under Anthopoulos, their biggest expenditure on the open market has been $65MM for Marcell Ozuna. With Bichette possibly trending towards something in the $150-200MM range, it didn’t seem like Atlanta would be the favorite to land him. Trading for someone like Trevor Story or Javier Báez may have been possible but it’s unclear if their respective clubs would make them available and they come with concerns of their own.

Rather than wait around and deal with the offseason uncertainty, Atlanta seemingly preferred to simply grab Kim now. That adds $16MM to next year’s books but they have some financial flexibility opening up. Ozuna and Raisel Iglesias are both impending free agents. Each of them individually are making $16MM this year, the same salary that Kim is set to make next year, assuming he doesn’t return to free agency.

Rosenthal notes that Kim is ready to come off the IL. That means Atlanta can use the final few weeks of the season to get a look at him. It seems they are hoping that Kim looks good but decides to trigger his option, therefore solving their shortstop question for next season.

In addition to this claim, the Rays announced that right-hander Kevin Kelly has been recalled and outfielder Richie Palacios reinstated from the 60-day injured list. Those are their two September call-up moves, with Palacios taking the 40-man spot vacated by Kim.

Photo courtesy of Robert Edwards, Kim Klement Neitzel, Imagn Images

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Atlanta Braves Newsstand Tampa Bay Rays Transactions Austin Riley Ha-Seong Kim Kevin Kelly Richie Palacios

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Every Team’s September 1 Call-Ups

By Anthony Franco | September 1, 2025 at 11:50pm CDT

As is the case each September 1, there’s been plenty of roster movement today. Active rosters expand from 26 to 28, allowing most teams to bring up one additional pitcher and position player apiece. A summation of every team’s call-ups from a busy Monday:

AL East

  • Blue Jays: INF Isiah Kiner-Falefa (claimed off waivers), RHP Dillon Tate
  • Orioles: C Maverick Handley, RHP Albert Suárez (activated from injured list)
  • Rays: RHP Kevin Kelly, OF Richie Palacios (activated from injured list)
  • Red Sox: RHP Zack Kelly, C Ali Sánchez
  • Yankees: C J.C. Escarra, LHP Ryan Yarbrough (activated from injured list)

AL Central

  • Guardians: RHP Zak Kent, OF Jhonkensy Noel, OF George Valera; also optioned IF Will Wilson
  • Royals: RHP Luinder Avila, 1B Jac Caglianone (activated from injured list), C Carter Jensen; also placed 2B Jonathan India on injured list
  • Tigers: RHP Chase Lee, OF Justyn-Henry Malloy
  • Twins: RHP Travis Adams, RHP Noah Davis, OF DaShawn Keirsey Jr.; also optioned RHP Mick Abel
  • White Sox: LHP Fraser Ellard, IF Bryan Ramos (expected to promote RHP Mike Clevinger this week)

AL West

  • A’s: RHP Scott McGough, IF Max Schuemann, RHP Luis Severino (activated from injured list); also optioned RHP Eduarniel Nuñez
  • Angels: LHP Mitch Farris, IF Scott Kingery, IF Chris Taylor (activated from injured list); also optioned IF Christian Moore
  • Astros: RHP Luis Garcia, OF Taylor Trammell (both players activated from injured list)
  • Mariners: C Harry Ford, RHP Luke Jackson, INF Leo Rivas; also released IF Donovan Solano
  • Rangers: IF Jake Burger, RHP Chris Martin (both players activated from injured list)

NL East

  • Braves: RHP Rolddy Muñoz, INF Luke Williams (activated from injured list)*
  • Marlins: RHP Luarbert Arias, C Brian Navarreto, RHP Michael Petersen; also placed RHP Edward Cabrera on injured list
  • Mets: IF Luisangel Acuña, RHP Justin Hagenman
  • Nationals: LHP Andrew Alvarez, IF Nasim Nuñez
  • Phillies: LHP Tim Mayza (claimed off waivers), C Garrett Stubbs

NL Central

  • Brewers: SS Joey Ortiz (activated from injured list), RHP Craig Yoho
  • Cardinals: RHP Chris Roycroft, OF Victor Scott II (activated from injured list)
  • Cubs: OF Kevin Alcántara, RHP Aaron Civale (free agent signee), 1B Carlos Santana (free agent signee); also optioned OF Owen Caissie
  • Pirates: RHP Cam Sanders, 2B Nick Yorke
  • Reds: IF Sal Stewart, RHP Yosver Zulueta

NL West

  • Diamondbacks: OF Jorge Barrosa, RHP Ryan Thompson (activated from injured list)
  • Dodgers: INF Hyeseong Kim, RHP Michael Kopech (both players activated from injured list)
  • Giants: RHP JT Brubaker, OF Grant McCray
  • Padres: OF Jackson Merrill (activated from injured list), RHP Sean Reynolds
  • Rockies: LHP Ryan Rolison, C Drew Romo

* Atlanta’s waiver claim of Ha-Seong Kim, while the most significant move of the day, isn’t counted here because Kim is currently on the 10-day injured list

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MLBTR Originals

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Brewers Outright Oliver Dunn

By Anthony Franco | September 1, 2025 at 11:15pm CDT

The Brewers sent infielder Oliver Dunn outright to Triple-A Nashville, according to MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy. Dunn cleared waivers after being designated for assignment when Jackson Chourio returned from the injured list over the weekend. This is his first outright and he doesn’t have three years of big league service, so he’ll need to accept the assignment.

Dunn has been with Nashville since the middle of April. He got a brief look in an uncertain third base mix in the season’s first couple weeks. He hit .167 with a .205 on-base percentage across 14 games before being optioned out. Caleb Durbin came up and seized the third base job as a rookie. The 27-year-old Dunn (28 tomorrow) has had a mediocre season in Triple-A. He’s batting .201/.304/.326 with seven homers through 407 plate appearances.

This has been Dunn’s first extended Triple-A stint. He saw only brief action there in 2023 and ’24. The former 11th round pick had big numbers at the Double-A level while a member of the Philly organization two seasons ago. Milwaukee acquired him going into the ’24 campaign, but he missed most of that season with a back injury. Dunn will remain on hand as infield depth in September. He’ll qualify for minor league free agency at the beginning of the winter if he’s not added back to the 40-man roster.

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Milwaukee Brewers Transactions Oliver Dunn

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Jason Adam Likely Headed For Season-Ending Quad Surgery

By Anthony Franco | September 1, 2025 at 10:12pm CDT

10:12pm: Kevin Acee of The San Diego Union-Tribune writes that Adam will undergo season-ending surgery if a follow-up MRI confirms the initial diagnosis. The hope is that he’ll be able to return some time around the beginning of the 2026 season.

9:42pm: Padres reliever Jason Adam has been diagnosed with a tendon rupture in his left quad, manager Mike Shildt tells reporters (including Dennis Lin of The Athletic). Shildt didn’t specify a recovery timeline or whether surgery will be required. It’s nevertheless difficult to imagine Adam will be back this season.

Adam was carted off the Petco Park mound during this evening’s loss to the Orioles (video via Talkin’ Baseball). Gunnar Henderson hit a chopper up the middle. The ball was a little behind the right-handed Adam, who naturally pulls toward first base on the follow-through in his delivery. Adam appeared to try to plant and change direction to field the ball when his left leg gave out. The injury had some similarities to the one suffered by Giants starter Landen Roupp, who hurt his knee (coincidentally also in San Diego) while trying to dodge a comeback line drive two weeks ago.

Both pitchers end up being carted off the field. Roupp got relatively good news, as he escaped structural damage — though he did suffer a bone bruise that’ll likely end his season. Adam’s injury unfortunately seems more serious. It’ll also be a much more significant development on the playoff picture. The Friars trail the Dodgers by 2.5 games in the NL West. They’re in possession of the National League’s second Wild Card spot and six games clear of the top non-playoff team.

Adam was a journeyman depth reliever throughout his 20s. He suffered a gruesome left ankle fracture while with the Cubs’ Triple-A affiliate in 2021. It was remarkable that he got back on a mound just four months later. Adam had a breakout showing with the Rays the following season. He has been one of the best and most durable relievers in MLB over the past four years.

Since the start of 2022, Adam ranks sixth in the majors with 262 appearances. His 2.04 earned run average is fourth among relievers with 100+ innings in that stretch (trialing Emmanuel Clase, Brusdar Graterol and Félix Bautista). Only Tyler Rogers and Bryan Abreu have more holds, and Adam has also collected 24 saves in that time.

Adam has continued to produce since the Padres acquired him from Tampa Bay at the ’24 trade deadline. He took a 1.81 ERA and above-average 26% strikeout rate into tonight’s appearance. He’s the team leader in holds (29) and relief innings (64 2/3). Only closer Robert Suarez has entered in higher leverage situations on average. Losing Adam will be a big hit in the postseason, though the Padres still have an enviable group of back-end arms. The Mason Miller deadline swing takes on added importance. Suarez remains an asset in the ninth inning, while Adrian Morejon and Jeremiah Estrada are high-end setup arms.

The Padres have Adam under arbitration control for one more season. He’ll be due a decent raise on this year’s $4.8MM salary if they tender him a contract. That’d remain a bargain if he were healthy, but it’d be a tougher call if this injury winds up threatening a chunk of his 2026 season. That prognosis won’t be clear until the organization provides a return timeline. The Padres could lose Suarez to an opt-out clause this winter, and it’s possible they plan to give Miller a look as a starting pitcher next spring.

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Newsstand San Diego Padres Jason Adam

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Padres Re-Sign Martin Maldonado To Minor League Deal

By Anthony Franco | September 1, 2025 at 9:04pm CDT

The Padres have brought back Martín Maldonado on a minor league contract, reports MadFriars. San Diego had designated the veteran catcher for assignment after acquiring Freddy Fermin from Kansas City on deadline day. They released Maldonado a week later.

As it has been more than a month since Maldonado’s last game action, MadFriars adds that he’ll report to the team’s Arizona complex. San Diego’s Triple-A affiliate in El Paso will be in action until September 21. It isn’t known if the Padres intend to assign Maldonado to El Paso once he’s warmed up or will keep him at the complex for the rest of the season.

It’s not clear when the deal was signed, but it wouldn’t be a surprise if this were quietly hammered out over the weekend. If the deal were finalized by August 31, Maldonado would be eligible for San Diego’s playoff roster. He clearly wouldn’t be a first choice to see any action in October, but that’d give them some protection if one of their top two catchers, Fermin or Elias Díaz, suffers an injury.

The Padres still have Luis Campusano on the 40-man roster, but he hasn’t started an MLB game behind the plate all year. San Diego also opted not to recall Campusano with the extra active roster spot that opened today — despite the fact that Campusano is hitting .329/.436/.603 in 91 Triple-A games. They instead continued carrying two infrequently used utility infielders, Will Wagner and Mason McCoy, when Jackson Merrill returned from the injured list. It seems apparent that the Padres have no interest in relying on Campusano in October if Fermin or Díaz were unavailable.

Maldonado is at least familiar with San Diego’s pitching staff if he’s pressed into action. His offensive shortcomings are well known, and he was hitting .204/.245/.327 in 161 plate appearances this year. He was also charged with eight passed balls, second most in MLB, in only 445 innings. He threw out just 13.2% of attempted basestealers. Still, the Padres presumably prefer Maldonado to Campusano as a third catcher, so there’s no harm in keeping him around as injury insurance at a position of weak organizational depth.

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San Diego Padres Transactions Martin Maldonado

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Pirates To Recall Nick Yorke

By Anthony Franco | September 1, 2025 at 6:22pm CDT

The Pirates are recalling infielder Nick Yorke and right-hander Cam Sanders from Triple-A Indianapolis, according to the MLB.com transaction log. Those will apparently be their September 1 roster moves. The Bucs are off today and may not officially announce the moves until tomorrow’s series opener against the Dodgers.

It’s the first promotion of the season for the 23-year-old Yorke. He first reached the majors as a September call-up late last season. He hit .216 with a pair of home runs in 11 games. Pittsburgh optioned him back to Triple-A at the end of Spring Training. Yorke has spent the entire season in Indianapolis, where he has been on the active roster aside from a week on the injured list with a sore shoulder in the middle of April.

Yorke is hitting .287/.348/.406 with seven home runs across 440 plate appearances. He has stolen 17 bases in 23 tries while turning in league average strikeout and walk rates. It’s a solid but hardly dominant showing for a player who also spent a good portion of the 2024 season at that level. To his credit, Yorke has picked things up as the season has progressed. He had a bad April around the injury but has hit fairly well since the beginning of May. Yorke is coming off his best month, as he slashed .337/.382/.446 in 24 games in August.

A first-round pick by the Red Sox in 2020, Yorke was acquired in a one-for-one swap for Quinn Priester at the ’24 deadline. Priester has had a breakout season this year (after being traded to the division rival Brewers). The trade doesn’t look particularly favorable for the Pirates at the moment, but Yorke still has time to emerge as a productive hitter. He’s primarily a second baseman but has a decent amount of corner outfield experience.

Nick Gonzales will get most of the second base playing time down the stretch. Yorke could take a few at-bats in left field from Tommy Pham, who has hit well in the second half but is an impending free agent on a non-contender. While Yorke has barely played any third base in his minor league career, Pittsburgh could also give him a few starts at the hot corner alongside fellow rookie Cam Devanney.

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Pittsburgh Pirates Cam Sanders Nick Yorke

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Braves Recall Rolddy Muñoz For MLB Debut

By Anthony Franco | September 1, 2025 at 5:28pm CDT

Before this afternoon’s game against the Cubs, the Braves called up relief pitcher Rolddy Muñoz. Atlanta also activated utility player Luke Williams from the 10-day injured list. Those accounted for Atlanta’s two expanded roster spots. Muñoz was added to the 40-man roster last offseason to keep him out of the Rule 5 draft. This is his first big league call.

The 25-year-old righty now has a good shot to make his MLB debut in the next few days. Muñoz, the twin brother of former Brave farmhand and current Cardinals reliever Roddery Muñoz, was an amateur signee out of the Dominican Republic. Baseball America ranks him the #18 prospect in an admittedly thin Atlanta farm system. He’s a two-pitch reliever with an upper 90s sinker and a slider that BA rates as a 70-grade (plus-plus) offering. It’s the kind of raw stuff that could play at the back of a bullpen, but Muñoz’s below-average control probably pushes him more towards middle relief.

Muñoz has divided the season between Double-A Columbus and Triple-A Gwinnett. He has combined for 55 2/3 innings with a 2.75 earned run average. Muñoz has walked an alarming 13% of batters faced with a slightly below-average 21.4% strikeout rate. The shape on his fastball causes it to play more as a ground-ball pitch than a huge swing-and-miss offering despite its velocity. Muñoz has gotten grounders at a near-52% clip this season. The Braves will see how his stuff plays against big league opposition as the season winds down, probably with an eye towards letting him battle for an Opening Day bullpen spot next spring.

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Atlanta Braves Rolddy Munoz

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    Top Stories

    Braves Claim Ha-Seong Kim From Rays

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    Nathan Eovaldi Likely Out For Season Due To Rotator Cuff Strain

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    Braves Select Hayden Harris, Designate Wander Suero

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