Carlos Correa Believed To Have Suffered Significant Left Ankle Injury

Carlos Correa is believed to have suffered a significant left ankle injury, reports Brian McTaggart of MLB.com. He’ll visit a foot specialist tomorrow to narrow down a diagnosis and recovery timeline. McTaggart writes that he’ll be out indefinitely and could miss weeks or potentially months.

Correa was injured while taking batting practice before Tuesday’s game against the Dodgers. The Astros scratched him, moving Nick Allen from third base to shortstop while drawing utility infielder Braden Shewmake into the lineup at the hot corner. Shewmake wound up hitting a solo home run off Shohei Ohtani that proved the difference in a 2-1 Houston win.

It’s the second consecutive day in which the Astros lost a key player during pregame batting practice. Catcher Yainer Diaz strained his oblique while warming up on Monday and is also going to miss some time. He went on the injured list on Tuesday morning.

The Astros will presumably provide more information on Correa within the next few days. The three-time All-Star has battled injuries in both feet over the past few years. Plantar fasciitis and a muscle strain in his left foot hobbled him in 2023. He missed most of the second half of the ’24 season with plantar fasciitis in his right foot.

Injury concerns famously scuttled two of Correa’s agreements during his 2022-23 free agent trip: both a $350MM deal with the Giants and a subsequent $315MM agreement with the Mets. Those were both related to team medical personnel having concerns about Correa’s right ankle, not the one which he injured tonight.

That’s of little solace to a Houston team dealing with yet another significant injury. Correa becomes their fourth regular position player — alongside Diaz, Jeremy Peña and Jake Meyers — on the injured list. They’re also without starting pitchers Hunter BrownCristian Javier and Tatsuya Imai plus closer Josh Hader.

Peña, down since April 12 with a right hamstring strain, could start a minor league rehab assignment this week. Correa had been the regular shortstop in his absence. Allen, a light-hitting defensive specialist, will man the position in the interim. Losing Correa means the Astros will stick with Isaac Paredes as the everyday third baseman. Christian Walker is enjoying a resurgent season at first base, while Yordan Alvarez is mostly at designated hitter.

The infield depth, at least once Peña returns, is the only silver lining. Houston unsuccessfully tried to move Paredes or Walker over the offseason to alleviate the logjam, but they essentially haven’t been at full health for the entire season. Even before the hamstring injury, Peña had battled a fingertip fracture on his right hand that he suffered during the World Baseball Classic.

Houston reacquired Correa from the Twins last summer, taking on a little over $70MM on the remaining three years of his contract. He hit .290/.355/.430 over 51 games down the stretch and was out to a .279/.369/.418 start to this season. Although he’s not the power threat he was at his peak, Correa remains an above-average hitter and quality defender at either position on the left side of the infield when healthy.

Angels Re-Sign Joey Lucchesi To Minor League Contract

The Angels re-signed lefty reliever Joey Lucchesi to a minor league contract, according to the MiLB.com transaction tracker. He’ll report back to Triple-A Salt Lake after electing free agency last week. Additionally, the log indicates the Halos released Hunter Strickland and Angel Perdomo from their non-roster deals.

Lucchesi has signed with the Angels three times within the past six weeks. He joined late in Spring Training on a big league deal. The Halos designated him for assignment after three appearances, re-signed him to a minor league contract, then selected him back onto the MLB roster in late April. He pitched twice more before being DFA again and choosing free agency when he cleared waivers.

The 32-year-old southpaw has given up six runs (five earned) across 3 1/3 innings. He has recorded four strikeouts while issuing six walks. Lucchesi worked 8 1/3 frames of five-run ball with 11 punchouts over four Triple-A outings in between his stints on the MLB roster.

Strickland and Perdomo have each been out to very tough starts to the season in Salt Lake. Strickland has allowed 18 earned runs on 21 hits over 12 1/3 innings. Perdomo has surrendered 16 earned across 12 frames, walking 14 batters and hitting three more. He has given up free passes to nearly a quarter of opposing hitters.

Rockies, Jordan Romano Agree To Minor League Deal

The Rockies are in agreement with veteran reliever Jordan Romano on a minor league contract, reports Thomas Harding of MLB.com. He’d been released by the Angels last week. The VC Sports Group client will report to the organization’s Arizona complex before being assigned to a minor league affiliate, Harding adds.

Romano signed a $2MM free agent deal with the Halos in December. It was a rebound flier on the two-time All-Star, who was coming off an ugly 8.23 ERA showing with the Phillies last year. Season-opening injuries to Robert Stephenson and Kirby Yates — plus Ben Joyce’s rehab from shoulder surgery — pushed Romano into the closer role.

Things started promisingly. Romano reeled off six straight scoreless appearances to begin the year, nailing down four saves in the process. A trip to the Bronx proved his undoing, however, as Romano allowed five runs while retiring one of nine opponents and taking two losses in that series. He rebounded with two straight scoreless outings with five strikeouts before surrendering four runs in a blowout loss in Kansas City on April 25. The Angels then designated him for assignment.

Romano wound up allowing nine runs over eight innings. He fanned 12 while recording a strong 13% swinging strike rate but issued six walks and hit a batter. His fastball averaged 94.5 mph and slider sat around 85 mph, down a tick from last season’s velocity. Both pitches were around three miles per hour harder during his peak years as one of the American League’s best closers in Toronto.

The 33-year-old has battled injuries in the interim. Romano missed time in 2023 with back inflammation and battled elbow injuries in ’24, eventually culminating in arthroscopic surgery. His 2025 season was cut short by inflammation and numbness in his right middle finger.

Colorado will take a low-risk flier to see if they can get Romano on track. The assignment to the complex indicates the Rockies will try to work out some mechanical or pitch mix tweaks before sending him back to game action.

The Rox have had a solid bullpen overall, though that’s skewed to an extent by the team using Chase Dollander behind an opener. Antonio Senzatela and Brennan Bernardino have had excellent starts to the year. The rest of the group has been up and down. Senzatela and Jimmy Herget are the only Colorado relievers who can’t be optioned.

Bob Skinner Passes Away

Bob Skinner, an All-Star left fielder and two-time World Series champion as a player, passed away on Monday at age 94. The Pirates announced the news this afternoon.

“As a member of the 1960 World Series championship team, Bob was an important part of one of the most beloved teams in our storied history and helped deliver a moment that will forever be woven into the fabric of our city,” Pirates owner Bob Nutting said in a press release. “Bob was a talented player, a proud Pirate and a respected member of the baseball community. On behalf of the entire Pirates organization, we extend our deepest condolences to Bob’s family, friends and all those who knew and loved him.”

Skinner played parts of 12 seasons in the big leagues, the majority of which came in Pittsburgh. A native of La Jolla, California, Skinner played a season at nearby San Diego Junior College. The Pirates had scouted him since high school and added him on a minor league deal in 1951. Skinner played one season in the minors before being drafted into the Marines during the Korean War. He was stationed in San Diego and played for his base team but was out of the professional ranks for two seasons.

After the conclusion of his service, Skinner returned to the Pirates for the 1954 season. He made his MLB debut that year but struggled as a rookie, leading the Bucs to send him back to the minors in ’55. Skinner made it back to the Majors one year later and finally settled in during his third MLB season, breaking out by hitting .305 in 1957.

Skinner took another step forward during the ’58 campaign. He hit .321/.387/.491 and drove in 70 runs to earn his first All-Star selection and some down ballot MVP support. That’d be his best statistical season, but the left-handed hitter returned to the All-Star Game in 1960. More importantly, the Pirates would go on to defeat the Yankees in a classic seven-game World Series for the franchise’s first championship in 35 years.

After a middling 1961 season, Skinner set a career high with 20 homers while batting .302 in 1962. The Pirates would trade him to the Reds a year later. Cincinnati dealt Skinner to the Cardinals midway through the ’64 campaign, a move that paid off handsomely for him personally. Although he was a role player by that point, he won his second career World Series when the Cards defeated the Yankees in another seven-game Fall Classic. Skinner went 3-4 as a pinch-hitter in that series (though all of his hits came in the St. Louis losses).

Skinner’s playing career ended after the 1966 season. That wasn’t close to the conclusion of his time in baseball, however. He jumped right into minor league managing and would up as an MLB skipper by 1968. The Phillies hired him to replace Gene Mauch midway through that season. Skinner himself was fired less than a year later as Philadelphia got out to a rough start to the ’69 campaign.

He had a brief stint as an interim manager with the Padres in 1977 but spent most of the decade as a hitting coach. That included a return to Pittsburgh in 1979, when the Bucs won another World Series. Skinner worked on the Braves’ coaching staff and as a minor league manager and scout with the Astros after that, remaining in baseball until 2009.

Skinner finished his playing career as a .277/.351/.421 hitter. He topped 100 home runs and tallied nearly 1200 hits while recording 531 runs batted in. MLB Trade Rumors sends our condolences to Skinner’s family — including his son Joel, a former MLB catcher and manager — loved ones, friends, and the countless people whose lives he impacted over his lengthy run in baseball.

Yusei Kikuchi Shut Down For 3-4 Weeks

The Angels are shutting down Yusei Kikuchi for the next three to four weeks, manager Kurt Suzuki tells reporters (link via Rhett Bollinger of MLB.com). The two-time All-Star landed on the injured list over the weekend with shoulder inflammation.

Kikuchi departed last Wednesday’s start at Rate Field after two innings. The Halos sent him for imaging two days later. The team hasn’t provided many more specifics beyond noting that Kikuchi received a second opinion over the weekend before deciding to attempt to rehab without surgery.

It’s not a worst case scenario but also not an especially encouraging update. Kikuchi will be reevaluated towards the end of the month. If he’s still able to proceed with non-surgical rehab, he’ll likely spend the majority of June building back up. The full shutdown means Kikuchi will need multiple bullpen and live batting practice sessions before he’s ready to begin a minor league assignment.

This is the second season of Kikuchi’s three-year, $63MM free agent contract. He was a relative bright spot for the Halos last year, turning in a sub-4.00 ERA over a career-best 178 1/3 innings. He has struggled to a 5.81 mark over his first seven starts this year. Kikuchi’s strikeout and walk profile is largely unchanged. The ugly run prevention is driven mostly by a spike in the batting average on balls in play against him.

Kikuchi has made a fairly notable mechanical change. He has raised his arm angle to one of the more over-the-top deliveries among lefty pitchers. Kikuchi had thrown from a similar arm slot during his first couple MLB seasons with the Mariners but had dropped his arm angle over the past few years. This year’s change has coincided with an altered pitch mix, as Kikuchi has scaled back on his slider in favor of more fastballs and a newly-added splitter.

It’s impossible to say whether any of those contributed to the injury. Potential shoulder and elbow problems are an occupational hazard for pitchers. In any case, the Angels will be without Kikuchi for quite some time. They recalled Sam Aldegheri to start tonight against the White Sox in what would have been Kikuchi’s turn. George KlassenCaden Dana, and long man Mitch Farris are other possibilities to step into the rotation. The Halos have a front four of José SorianoReid DetmersJack Kochanowicz and rookie Walbert Ureña. They enter play tonight with MLB’s worst record at 13-23.

Nationals Designate Jackson Rutledge For Assignment

The Nationals announced they’ve designated reliever Jackson Rutledge for assignment. That opens the 40-man roster spot for Max Kranick, who has officially signed a major league deal with the team.

Rutledge was the 17th overall pick in the 2019 draft. The hulking 6’8″, 240-pound righty spent most of his minor league career as a starter. He never developed consistent enough control to stick in an MLB rotation and moved to the bullpen after the 2024 season. He held a middle relief role for almost all of last year, his first extended big league action.

After an encouraging April, the righty allowed an earned run average north of 6.00 in each of the next three months. Rutledge pitched well in August but struggled again to close the season. The Nats optioned him to Triple-A Rochester to begin this year, only calling him up for one day on April 13.

The Pirates tagged Rutledge for seven runs on six hits and a couple walks over 1 1/3 innings in his lone appearance. Rutledge has given up seven runs (five earned) across 13 1/3 frames in the minors. He has only fanned nine of 59 batters faced while walking eight and tossing four wild pitches.

Washington has five days to trade Rutledge or expose him to waivers. He has draft pedigree but hasn’t found a ton of success at either the MLB or Triple-A levels. His fastball is in the 94-95 mph range this year and he’s mixing a cutter and splitter. If another team believes they can unlock some of his early-career promise, they could option him to the minors for the remainder of the season. Rutledge has never been outrighted and has less than three years of service time, so the Nationals would keep him in the organization if he clears waivers.

Rays Building Up Mason Englert, Griffin Jax As Rotation Options

The Rays have had an excellent first six weeks. Last night’s series-opening win over the Blue Jays was their fourth in a row and 10th in their last 11. They’re up to a 22-12 record that has them behind only the Yankees in the American League.

Tampa Bay’s rotation has played a key role in their success. Rays starters have a 3.16 earned run average that ranks third in MLB behind the Yankees’ and Dodgers’ rotations. Each of Drew RasmussenShane McClanahan and offseason signees Nick Martinez and Steven Matz have been good to excellent.

The Rays ideally would have had Ryan Pepiot to complete their starting five. He’s instead going to lose the entire season to a hip injury that required surgery. That leaves the fifth spot up for grabs, and the Rays are building up a pair of relievers as rotation candidates.

Griffin Jax has opened his two most recent appearances. They weren’t true “starts,” as he was pulled by design in the third inning of each. Jax, who told MLB.com’s Adam Berry in late April that he and the team were discussing a potential rotation move, built up to 45 pitches across 2 2/3 frames on Saturday against the Giants. It was his highest pitch count in an appearance since 2022. In each of the last two outings, Jax has mixed in a cutter against left-handed batters. He’d tinkered with that pitch at the end of the 2025 season but hadn’t used it this year until he started to build up.

It’s not an entirely unfamiliar role. Jax was a starter throughout his minor league career and started 14 of 18 appearances as a rookie for the Twins in 2021. He struggled to a 6.37 ERA that season and moved fully to the bullpen in year two. Jax’s strikeout and ground-ball rates skyrocketed in shorter stints. He emerged as a high-leverage reliever whom the Twins flipped to Tampa Bay for former top pitching prospect Taj Bradley last summer.

Jax isn’t the only Rays pitcher building into a potential starting role. Mason Englert, who has come out of the bullpen for all but three of his 81 MLB appearances, is doing the same (link via Marc Topkin of The Tampa Bay Times). Englert is currently on the 15-day injured list after feeling seemingly minor forearm soreness in mid-April. The Rays are sending him to Triple-A Durham on a rehab assignment this week and will use that time to build him up as a starter.

The Rays acquired Englert from the Tigers over the 2024-25 offseason. He hasn’t started regularly since he was in Double-A. That’s partially due to his status as a Rule 5 pick, as the Tigers needed to keep him on the MLB roster for his entire rookie season (2023) to secure his long-term rights. Englert had barely pitched above A-ball at the time, and it’s easier for teams to shield Rule 5 picks as low-leverage bullpen arms than it is to keep developing them as starters at the MLB level.

Englert has middling career numbers but is coming off a solid year in which he threw 44 2/3 innings of 3.83 ERA ball with slightly better than average strikeout and walk rates. He has a five-pitch mix headlined by a changeup that he’ll throw to batters of either handedness. Englert had relatively neutral platoon splits last season. He has very little experience turning a lineup over multiple times, but he has a deep enough arsenal that he should be able to compete with left-handed hitters.

Pitchers can spend up to 30 days on a rehab assignment. Englert also still has a minor league option if the Rays wanted to continue building him in Triple-A beyond that. He made a spot start earlier this year and threw 65 pitches, though, so it might only take a couple minor league starts before the Rays feel comfortable letting him throw at least 80-90 pitches in an MLB game.

None of that is to say that either Jax or Englert are guaranteed to hold rotation roles. The Rays have long valued flexibility on the pitching staff. They could use either pitcher as openers and/or as tandem starters or decide they’re better fits as 2-3 inning arms out of the bullpen. Jesse Scholtens and Joe Boyle (rehabbing from an elbow strain) have more starting experience at the MLB level. Tampa Bay has had some success with mid-career reliever to starter moves, however. Rasmussen, Jeffrey Springs and Zack Littell were all reasonably well established middle relievers who built up as successful starters during previous seasons.

Braves Trade Jonah Heim To A’s

The Braves announced they’ve traded catcher Jonah Heim to the Athletics for cash. He was just designated for assignment this evening when Atlanta welcomed Sean Murphy back from the injured list.

The A’s subsequently announced the trade as well, placing Shea Langeliers on the paternity list in a corresponding move. They already had an opening on the 40-man roster after losing infielder Andy Ibáñez on waivers to the Mets last week. They’re off tonight but will presumably have Heim available for tomorrow’s series opener in Philadelphia.

Heim goes back to the team for which he made his MLB debut six years ago. Originally an Orioles draftee, he was traded to the Rays and then to the A’s (for infielder Joey Wendle) while in the minor leagues. The switch-hitter reached the Majors during the shortened season, playing in 13 games. The A’s traded him to the Rangers the following offseason as part of the Elvis Andrus/Khris Davis swap.

That turned out to be an excellent pickup for Texas. Heim struggled as a rookie in 2021 but broke through as a capable starting catcher the following year. He took another step forward in ’23, earning an All-Star selection and winning a Gold Glove while hitting .258/.317/.438. Heim was the starting catcher for the Rangers’ World Series run that season.

His production has taken a nosedive over the last couple years. Heim combined for a .217/.269/.334 batting line in more than 900 plate appearances between 2024-25. Although his strikeout rate was mostly unchanged, his walk rate dipped slightly and he lost a couple points on his hard contact percentage. Texas non-tendered him last winter, cutting him loose for what would have been his final season of arbitration.

Heim signed a $1.25MM free agent contract with Atlanta early in Spring Training. Murphy was rehabbing from last fall’s hip labrum surgery. The Braves needed a short-term backup but would have had a tough time carrying three catchers once Murphy returned to join Drake Baldwin. Heim showed reasonably well over 12 games, hitting .231/.311/.410 with one home run in 45 plate appearances. He had an even number of walks and strikeouts (five apiece). The defense was a little more concerning, as he failed to catch any of the 13 runners who attempted to steal against him. He didn’t commit any passed balls but was behind the dish for six wild pitches in 103 innings.

Like the Braves, the A’s have one of the best starting catchers in MLB. Langeliers will be back within the next three days or so. Austin Wynns has backed Langeliers up all season, but he’s out to an .086 start without an extra-base hit through 13 games. The A’s probably wouldn’t have assumed Heim’s salary only to carry him on the roster for a few days. Both he and Wynns have over five years of service time and could refuse a minor league assignment while collecting their remaining salaries. Wynns is playing on a $1.1MM arbitration deal.

Astros To Place Yainer Diaz On Injured List

A left oblique injury will send Astros catcher Yainer Diaz to the 10-day injured list, manager Joe Espada tells the Houston beat (relayed by Chandler Rome of The Athletic). Houston called up César Salazar this evening with Diaz unavailable, so they probably won’t bring up another catcher when the IL stint is finalized tomorrow.

Zach Dezenzo and Shay Whitcomb — the latter of whom was optioned tonight as the corresponding move for Salazar’s selection — are the only healthy position players on optional assignment to Triple-A. Teams ordinarily cannot recall an optioned hitter for at least 10 days, but an exception is made when they’re called back up to replace an injured player.

Diaz will be the sixth hitter to land on Houston’s injured list. He joins Jeremy Peña and Jake Meyers as regulars who are out of action. They’re also down six starting pitchers — including three of their projected top four arms in Hunter BrownTatsuya Imai and Cristian Javier — and have been without closer Josh Hader all season.

The injury continues what has been an ugly start for Diaz. The 27-year-old has been one of the better offensive catchers in MLB over his three-plus seasons. His numbers gradually trended down each year from a fantastic rookie campaign, though, and he has really struggled offensively through the first six weeks. Diaz is hitting .248/.264/.356 with a pair of home runs through 106 plate appearances.

One of the most aggressive hitters in the league, Diaz has always had a low on-base floor. He has generally hit for solid averages and ranked fourth among catchers (behind Cal RaleighShea Langeliers and Salvador Perez) with 59 homers between 2023-25. Diaz’s ground-balls are up and his hard contact rate way down in the early going.

It’s nevertheless a sizable hit to Houston’s lineup. Christian Vázquez has hit very well (.316/.371/.491) in the early going, but he had one of the game’s lightest bats in each of the last three seasons. The Astros are surely pleased with what they’ve gotten from Vázquez’s minor league contract. Still, he’s probably miscast for a primary catching job at this stage of his career. The Astros have given Salazar limited MLB opportunities over the past few years.

Espada didn’t specify a timeline for Diaz’s return. There’s a wide range of outcomes on oblique injuries depending on the severity of a strain. Even moderate strains tend to cost hitters a few weeks to a month.

Orioles Outright Albert Suárez

The Orioles announced this evening that righty Albert Suárez accepted an outright assignment to Triple-A Norfolk. He cleared waivers after being designated for assignment on Saturday. Suárez has the service time and previous outright to elect free agency but decided to remain with the O’s as non-roster rotation or long relief depth.

This is Suárez’s third season with the organization. He was a nice find as a minor league signee who had spent the 2019-23 campaigns in Asia. Suárez surprisingly held a rotation spot for a good chunk of the ’24 season, working to a 3.70 earned run average across 133 2/3 innings. He spent most of last year rehabbing a shoulder strain and dealt with forearm discomfort at the end of the season.

The injuries limited Suárez to 11 2/3 MLB frames in 2025. The Orioles non-tendered him as a result, though they brought him back on a minor league deal. He has had a couple stints at the MLB level this season, working 15 2/3 innings over six appearances. His 3.45 ERA isn’t bad on the surface, but Suárez has also allowed four unearned runs and has as many walks as strikeouts (nine apiece).

Baltimore has preferred Suárez in a relief role at the MLB level over the past year-plus. The rotation has taken a few injury hits that could eventually open an opportunity for him to make a spot start or two. Suárez is out of options, so there’s a decent chance he’ll go through the selection/outright cycle a few times over the course of the year.