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Corey Knebel Suffers Hamstring Injury, Will Be Placed On DL

By Steve Adams | April 6, 2018 at 2:50pm CDT

TODAY: The DL placement is now official, with the team calling the injury a strain. Knebel will miss at least six weeks, manager Craig Counsell tells MLB Network Radio (Twitter link). The Brewers plan to share closing opportunities among a variety of players rather than declaring one single replacement.

Young righty Adrian Houser is heading up to the active roster. Originally acquired in the 2015 deal that sent Carlos Gomez to Houston, Houser had fallen off the radar a bit owing to Tommy John surgery. It’ll be interesting to see how he performs and how much of an opportunity he’ll receive.

YESTERDAY: 10:20pm: MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy tweets that Knebel will be placed on the disabled list and will undergo an MRI to evaluate the extent of the damage tomorrow morning.

10:16pm: Brewers closer Corey Knebel exited Thursday night’s game with what looked to be a hamstring injury. Upon making a pitch to Cubs infielder Tommy La Stella with two outs in the ninth inning, Knebel dropped to the ground and immediately clutched his left hamstring — the same hamstring which, as noted by the Milwaukee broadcast, prompted Knebel to exit a Cactus League game early in Spring Training.

Knebel, who was getting some work in after going a week between appearances, made his way to the clubhouse with a pair of athletic trainers and was unable to put weight on his leg as he was helped off the field.

The 26-year-old Knebel broke out as one of the best relievers in the National League last season when he saved 39 games and logged a 1.78 ERA with an otherworldly 14.9 K/9 against 4.7 BB/9 in 76 innings of work. The 2018 season represents what would be his first full season as a big league closer, though any serious injury would obviously throw a wrench into that plan.

The Brewers have several options who could step into the ninth-inning spotlight; veteran Matt Albers has pitched the eighth inning three times already this season. Josh Hader has been dominant in a bullpen role since moving into that spot last season, though limiting his role to save situations would leave the team with only one southpaw setup option. Veteran righty Jeremy Jeffress, of course, is no stranger to closing out games for the Brewers and could conceivably be a candidate to step into that role as well. Fellow right-hander Jacob Barnes has been pitching in a setup capacity since last season and has demonstrated an ability to miss plenty of bats in his own right.

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Milwaukee Brewers Corey Knebel

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Diamondbacks Claim Troy Scribner, Designate Jeremy Hazelbaker

By Jeff Todd | April 6, 2018 at 2:07pm CDT

The Diamondbacks have claimed righty Troy Scribner off waivers from the Angels, per a club announcement. Arizona designated outfielder Jeremy Hazelbaker for assignment to create roster space.

Scribner had been designated for assignment recently by the Halos to open the door to a claim of fellow righty Akeel Morris. The 26-year-old reached the majors last year in a swingman role and has mostly functioned as a starter over his time in the minors.

In his first 23 2/3 MLB frames, compiled over four starts and six relief appearances, Scribner allowed 11 earned runs on only 17 hits, though a whopping seven of those left the yard. He also compiled 18 strikeouts against ten walks. Scribner has a 4.03 ERA with 8.3 K/9 and 3.6 BB/9 over his 149 2/3 career Triple-A innings.

Hazelbaker, who is best known for his unbelievable start to the 2016 season, will lose his roster spot despite having compiled a .258/.327/.500 slash line through 285 MLB plate appearances. The 30-year-old has also mostly demolished Triple-A pitching in recent seasons. While high batting averages on balls in play leave plenty of room for skepticism, Hazelbaker has always posted lofty BABIP figures as a professional. He also knows how to swipe a bag and can play any of the three outfield positions, so perhaps another team will take a shot.

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Arizona Diamondbacks Los Angeles Angels Transactions Jeremy Hazelbaker Troy Scribner

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Padres Acquire Brett Nicholas From Rangers

By Steve Adams | April 6, 2018 at 1:03pm CDT

The Padres announced that they’ve acquired catcher Brett Nicholas from the Rangers in exchange for a player to be named later or cash. Nicholas, 29, was outrighted off the Rangers’ 40-man roster late in Spring Training and recently was further displaced by Texas’ signing of Cameron Rupp to a minor league contract. The Padres have assigned him to Triple-A El Paso.

Nicholas has appeared in 36 games for the Rangers over the past two seasons, tallying 110 plate appearances and hitting .252/.300/.446 with four homers in that brief sample. He’s halted just two of 15 stolen-base attempts against Rangers pitching in that time, though he’s been more effective (27 percent) in parts of eight minor league seasons. Baseball Prospectus doesn’t view his pitch framing in either the Majors or the minors too highly, but Nicholas is a lifetime .283/.333/.427 hitter in 1669 Triple-A plate appearances.

Padres general manager A.J. Preller is plenty familiar with Nicholas, as he was an assistant GM with the Rangers back in 2010 when Texas drafted Nicholas in the sixth round out of Missouri. The left-handed-hitting Nicholas will give the Friars some additional depth behind catchers Austin Hedges and A.J. Ellis, and he also comes with some experience at first base. It seems likely that Nicholas will team with Raffy Lopez to handle the bulk of the catching duties in Triple-A.

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San Diego Padres Texas Rangers Transactions Brett Nicholas

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Marlins Reportedly In Talks With Dustin McGowan

By Steve Adams | April 6, 2018 at 12:57pm CDT

The Marlins are discussing a deal with free-agent righty Dustin McGowan, tweets SB Nation’s Chris Cotillo. The veteran reliever was in Spring Training with the Rays on a minor league deal but was granted his release in early March when he learned he would not make the 25-man roster. He’s represented by ACES.

McGowan is no stranger to South Florida, having spent the 2016-17 seasons with the Marlins. In that time, he totaled 144 2/3 innings of 3.86 ERA ball with 7.9 K/9, 3.7 BB/9 and 1.2 HR/9 with a 53 percent ground-ball rate. A starter early in his career with the Blue Jays, McGowan has worked almost entirely out of the bullpen since 2013 — often tossing more than one inning per appearance — and logged a 4.08 ERA in 275 2/3 frames in that time.

Miami entered the season with Brad Ziegler as its closer and a pair of quality setup pieces behind him in the form of Kyle Barraclough and Drew Steckenrider. Beyond that trio, though, the relief corps has been largely pieced together, currently featuring Junichi Tazawa, Tayron Guerrero, Jarlin Garcia, Odrisamer Despaigne, Chris O’Grady and Jacob Turner.

Adding McGowan to the mix — presumably down the line a bit, as he’d likely need a tune-up in the minors — would give the Fish some more experience and some more length out of their bullpen. That seems particularly important to a club that’s currently relying on righty Jose Urena and three rookies (Dillon Peters, Trevor Richards and Caleb Smith) in a four-man rotation while Dan Straily recovers from a forearm issue.

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Miami Marlins Dustin McGowan

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Indians Activate Michael Brantley

By Steve Adams | April 6, 2018 at 10:51am CDT

The Indians announced that they’ve activated outfielder Michael Brantley from the 10-day disabled list. Fellow outfielder Tyler Naquin was optioned to Triple-A Columbus to clear a spot on the 25-man roster for Brantley, who’d opened the year on the DL while finalizing his recovery from offseason ankle surgery.

Durability has been a major concern for Brantley in recent years, as he’s undergone a pair of shoulder operations in addition to this offseason’s ankle surgery. Those ailments combined to limit the 30-year-old to just 101 games since Opening Day 2016.

Given Brantley’s recent rash of injuries, it’s easy to forget just how great of a player he can be at full strength. Long a quality outfield piece in Cleveland, “Dr. Smooth” broke out as one of the American League’s best all-around players in a 2014 season that saw him finish third in the AL MVP race after posting a superlative .327/.385/.506 batting line with a league-leading 45 doubles, 20 homers and 23 steals. Brantley followed that up with a similarly excellent .310/.379/.480 slash the following season and looked to be an emerging star before initially injuring his shoulder while diving for a catch in the left-center gap at Target Field in Minneapolis that September.

His injury troubles notwithstanding, Brantley saw his $12MM club option exercised by the Indians last November. Given the offseason surgery and the manner in which corner outfielders were further devalued in free agency this winter, the Cleveland front office may prefer a mulligan on that decision, though Brantley was worth more than $12MM in just 90 games last season when he hit .290/.357/.444 with 20 doubles, nine homers and 11 steals.

The 2018 season will be a crucial one for Brantley, whose contract expires at season’s end. If he can steer clear of the DL for the first time since 2014 and convince clubs that his shoulder and ankle are largely healthy, then it stands to reason that a player with his ability and track record could land a nice multi-year deal in his first foray into the open market. If the 2018 season is again marred by injuries, however, that outcome seems decidedly less likely.

As for Naquin, he’ll head back to Columbus and hope for yet another opportunity to prove that his terrific 2016 campaign wasn’t a fluke. The former first-rounder had seen his prospect star fade but was called upon in the wake of Brantley’s injuries and capitalized in surprising fashion. Through 365 plate appearances that season, Naquin slashed .296/.372/.514 with 14 homers — good enough to finish third in AL Rookie of the Year voting. That production, though, was accompanied by a sky-high .411 BABIP and 30.7 percent strikeout rate, so it’s perhaps not hard to see why the Indians remain unconvinced that he can replicate those numbers.

[Related: Cleveland Indians depth chart]

Naquin has since been leapfrogged by Bradley Zimmer on the team’s depth chart, and with Brantley, Lonnie Chisenhall, Rajai Davis and Brandon Guyer rounding out the big league outfield. Brantley, Chisenhall, Davis and possibly Guyer ($3MM club option) are all free agents after the 2018 season, though, so keeping Naquin on hand as depth makes sense for Cleveland.

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Cleveland Guardians Michael Brantley Tyler Naquin

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Travis Snider Signs With Long Island Ducks

By Steve Adams | April 6, 2018 at 10:21am CDT

Former big league outfielder Travis Snider has signed with the Long Island Ducks of the independent Atlantic League, the team announced yesterday. He’ll hope to use the independent circuit as a launching pad back into affiliated ball — as many players before him have done.

Now 30 years of age, Snider is a former first-round pick of the Blue Jays (14th overall in 2006) that was touted as one of the game’s elite prospects throughout the entirety of his minor league tenure. Both Baseball America and Baseball Prospectus placed Snider within the top 15 overall prospects in baseball on two separate editions of their annual top 100 rankings.

Snider made his big league debut at the age of 20 and impressed in a 24-game stint with the Jays, hitting .301/.338/.466 with a pair of homers in 80 plate appearances. It seemed as though he was on the cusp of cementing himself as a quality big league regular for years to come, but Snider was never able to maintain much consistency in the big leagues. He was eventually flipped to the Pirates for another struggling first-rounder: right-hander Brad Lincoln. While Snider had a solid 2014 campaign with the Bucs (.264/.338/.438, 13 homers), he cratered in Baltimore the following season and hasn’t been in the Majors since.

Snider did log useful numbers in Triple-A with the Rangers and Mets last season, hitting a combined .296/.375/.432 in 485 plate appearances. He’s also a lifetime .306/.387/.478 hitter at that level. Given his success in Triple-A, it stands to reason that a nice showing in the Atlantic League could open a door for Snider to land a minor league deal with a club in need of outfield depth in the upper minors.

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Transactions Travis Snider

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Offseason In Review: Chicago White Sox

By Tim Dierkes | April 6, 2018 at 8:31am CDT

Though the rebuilding White Sox made bids for a few big name position players, they settled for a quiet offseason with a handful of veteran additions.

Major League Signings

  • Welington Castillo, C: two years, $15MM
  • Miguel Gonzalez, SP: one year, $4.75MM
  • Total spend: $19.75MM

Trades and Claims

  • Claimed OF Daniel Palka off waivers from Twins
  • Claimed RP Jose Ruiz off waivers from Padres (later outrighted to High-A)
  • Acquired RP Thyago Vieira from Mariners for $500K in international bonus money
  • Acquired RP Joakim Soria and $1MM from the Royals and RP Luis Avilan and $2MM from the Dodgers, surrendering 2B Jake Peter in the three-team deal
  • Acquired SS Jose Rondon from Padres for cash considerations
  • Acquired P Ricardo Pinto from Phillies for international bonus pool money
  • Acquired cash from Rangers for OF Carlos Tocci, who was taken from the Phillies in the Rule 5 draft

Notable Minor League Signings

  • Hector Santiago, Jeanmar Gomez, Rob Scahill, Robbie Ross, Bruce Rondon, Xavier Cedeno, Michael Ynoa, T.J. House, Chris Volstad, Patrick Leonard, Gonzalez Germen

Notable Losses

  • Mike Pelfrey, David Holmberg, Geovany Soto, Jake Peter, Rymer Liriano, Brad Goldberg, Rob Brantly, Zach Putnam, Al Alburquerque, Michael Ynoa

Needs Addressed

Despite entertaining several bold offseason moves, the White Sox ultimately focused on veteran placeholders in what ended up being a quiet offseason.  This serves as no surprise, with the team entering the second year of a rebuilding process.  The team’s signature offseason move was an upgrade at catcher with the signing of Welington Castillo in December.

Welington Castillo | Dan Hamilton-USA TODAY Sports

After deploying an inexperienced duo of Kevan Smith and Omar Narvaez behind the dish last year, the soon-to-be 31-year-old Castillo was imported on a two-year free agent contract.  Castillo, who started his career in the Cubs organization, adds pop to the lineup and a veteran presence for a rotation with three members under the age of 25 (in addition to several young arms looming in the upper minors).

In January, the Sox re-signed veteran starting pitcher Miguel Gonzalez, who made 45 starts for them from 2016-17 until being dealt to the Rangers at the end of August.  Gonzalez’s job, much like fellow rotation-mate James Shields, is to take the ball every fifth day until he’s nudged out by top pitching prospect Michael Kopech.

Improving the team’s bullpen was a stated desire for White Sox GM Rick Hahn, and he accomplished this mainly through one January trade.  Surrendering minor league utility type Jake Peter, who had gone unclaimed in the Rule 5 draft, Hahn acquired Joakim Soria from the Royals and Luis Avilan from the Dodgers.  Both veterans slot in toward the back of Chicago’s bullpen, along with holdover Nate Jones, who opened the season healthy after undergoing nerve surgery in his pitching elbow last summer.  Hector Santiago, added on a minor league deal, also cracked the Opening Day bullpen.  Given last summer’s trades of David Robertson, Tommy Kahnle, Anthony Swarzak, and Dan Jennings, the White Sox had to add a few veterans to the decimated ’pen.

Hahn also tinkered around the edges, adding outfielder Daniel Palka, shortstop Jose Rondon, and pitchers Thyago Vieira, Ricardo Pinto, and Jose Ruiz through trades and waiver claims.  All but Ruiz remain on the 40-man roster.  Pitchers Vieira and Pinto were acquired for international bonus pool space, which was of lesser value to the White Sox since they are in the $300K bonus pool penalty box for signing Luis Robert a year ago.  Vieira is a live arm who has touched 102 miles per hour, and he’ll eventually be joined at Triple-A Charlotte by Pinto, who is being stretched out as a starter.  Both 24-year-olds made their MLB debuts last season, and it’s possible that either or both could be up in the Majors with the Sox in 2018.

Questions Remaining

One big offseason question was whether the White Sox would trade first baseman Jose Abreu and/or right fielder Avisail Garcia.  Hahn has been clear that the club is constantly making an assessment of whether to extend or eventually trade the pair, and nothing has been settled in that regard.  Both are under control through 2019, but the 26-year-old Garcia may make more sense as a part of the next contending White Sox team than the 31-year-old Abreu.

Jose Abreu & Avisail Garcia | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports

Rumors suggested the Athletics, Giants, and Blue Jays were among those to check in on Garcia, while the Red Sox and others may have had dialogue regarding Abreu.  Given the stagnant free agent market for many veterans, it’s no surprise Hahn found trade offers unsatisfactory.  Still, with both players remaining on the South Side and no contract extensions in place, rumors figure to abound once again this summer as the non-waiver trade deadline approaches.

Hahn decided to go big game fishing around the Winter Meetings, with Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic describing the White Sox as the “most aggressive suitor” for Orioles shortstop/third baseman Manny Machado.  Though Rosenthal said the White Sox and Orioles “discussed a package for Machado that would include either right-hander Lucas Giolito or right-hander Michael Kopech but not both,” Bob Nightengale of USA Today described the offer as “solid,” but without any top prospects.

With Machado headed to free agency after the 2018 season, it would seem that Chicago’s interest was in signing him to a massive contract extension before he could reach the open market.  That was an unlikely proposition, and Machado stayed put.  But it does suggest that a team that has never given out a contract bigger than Abreu’s $68MM has at least considered extending an offer perhaps four times that size to the young superstar.  With 2019 payroll commitments of just $10.9MM in guaranteed contract, the White Sox could be a major player in the 2018-19 free agent market.  Their previous interest in Machado, at least, seems likely to once again resurface.

More sensible than Machado was Hahn’s pursuit of outfielder Christian Yelich.  The 26-year-old is under contract potentially through 2022, so the bulk of his control would have fallen within the White Sox’ targeted window of contention.  It appears some kind of offer was made to the Marlins for Yelich, but Miami instead accepted a package from the Brewers headlined by Lewis Brinson.  The White Sox also reportedly made some late effort to be opportunistic on Logan Morrison’s stagnant market, but he wound up with the Twins.

Despite an Opening Day payroll that settled in as the team’s lowest since 2004, the White Sox did not use their financial flexibility to purchase prospects by taking on bad contracts.  That’s perhaps not in the style of owner Jerry Reinsdorf, but it’s conceivable the White Sox could have taken on dead money for players like Adrian Gonzalez, Scott Kazmir, Matt Kemp, Rusney Castillo, or Yasmany Tomas and further bolstered their farm system.

Overview

Though they carry just a 69-win projection from FanGraphs, the White Sox look to be baseball’s most interesting rebuilding team.  While preseason projections inevitably come with great variability and the White Sox are loaded with upside, the South Siders would probably have to beat their forecast by about 17 wins to sneak into the playoffs as the AL’s second Wild Card.  Even Hahn recently said, “I think even under the most optimistic projections of our ability to contend, certainly ’18 and ’19 don’t include the bulk of the time when we anticipate having a window open to us.”  I imagine Hahn and many White Sox fans are hoping the team can nonetheless arrive early, and start contending next year.

How would you grade the offseason for the ChiSox? (Link to poll for Trade Rumors app users)

How would you grade the White Sox' offseason?
B 36.44% (963 votes)
C 34.17% (903 votes)
A 12.30% (325 votes)
D 11.43% (302 votes)
F 5.68% (150 votes)
Total Votes: 2,643

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

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2017-18 Offseason In Review Chicago White Sox MLBTR Originals

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MLB Daily Roster Roundup: Conforto, Myers, Perez, Wainwright

By Jason Martinez | April 5, 2018 at 11:10pm CDT

ROSTER MOVES BY TEAM
(April 4th – April 5th)

NATIONAL LEAGUE

  • ATLANTA BRAVES | Depth Chart
    • Promoted: RP Luke Jackson (contract purchased)
    • Designated for assignment: C Chris Stewart
  • COLORADO ROCKIES | Depth Chart | Team Payroll
    • Contract Extension: OF Charlie Blackmon (5 years, $94MM)
  • LOS ANGELES DODGERS | Depth Chart
    • Acquired: SP/RP Alec Asher (claimed off waivers from Orioles)
      • Asher was optioned to Triple-A.
    • Designated for assignment: RP/SP Zach Neal
      • Neal’s removal from the 25-man roster clears a spot for Josh Fields to return from the Paternity List.
  • MIAMI MARLINS | Depth Chart
    • Placed on 10-Day DL: 1B/OF Garrett Cooper (wrist contusion)
    • Recalled: OF Braxton Lee
  • NEW YORK METS | Depth Chart
    • Activated from 10-Day DL: OF Michael Conforto
      • Conforto batted 1st and played CF in Thursday’s game.
    • Optioned: INF/OF Phillip Evans
  • PITTSBURGH PIRATES | Depth Chart
    • Acquired: RP Jesus Liranzo (claimed off waivers from Dodgers)
      • Liranzo was optioned to Double-A.
  • SAN DIEGO PADRES | Depth Chart
    • Placed on 10-Day DL: OF Wil Myers (nerve irritation in arm)
    • Promoted: RP Phil Maton
  • ST. LOUIS CARDINALS | Depth Chart 
    • Activated from 10-Day DL: SP Adam Wainwright
      • Wainwright started versus the Diamondbacks on Thursday.
    • Optioned: SP Jack Flaherty

AMERICAN LEAGUE

  • CLEVELAND INDIANS | Depth Chart
    • Optioned: OF Tyler Naquin
      • This clears a spot for Michael Brantley, who is expected to return from the DL on Friday.
  • DETROIT TIGERS | Depth Chart
    • Activated from DL: RP Johnny Barbato 
      • Barbato was optioned to Triple-A
  • LOS ANGELES ANGELS | Depth Chart
    • Acquired: SP/RP Miguel Almonte (acquired from Royals for PTBNL or cash considerations)
      • Almonte was optioned to Triple-A.
    • Designated for assignment: C Juan Graterol
  • OAKLAND ATHLETICS | Depth Chart
    • Acquired: OF Trayce Thompson (claimed off waivers from Yankees)
      • Thompson is expected to join the team on Friday. A corresponding move has not been reported.
    • Transferred to 60-Day DL: SP Paul Blackburn
  • TEXAS RANGERS | Depth Chart
    • Activated from 10-Day DL: SP Martin Perez
      • Perez started versus the A’s on Thursday.
    • Optioned: RP Jose Leclerc

REHAB ASSIGNMENTS | Injury Report

  • Johan Camargo (ATL), Carlos Estevez (COL), Yuli Gurriel (HOU), James Hoyt (HOU), Phil Hughes (MIN), Dominic Smith (NYM), Renato Nunez (OAK), Ryan Dull (OAK), Ben Gamel (SEA), Tony Barnette (TEX)

FUTURE EXPECTED MOVES

  • BOS: SP Eduardo Rodriguez will be activated from the DL on Sunday April 8th, according to Peter Abraham of the Boston Globe.
  • CLE: The Indians plan to activate OF Michael Brantley from the DL on Friday April 6th, according to Jordan Bastian of MLB.com.
  • MIL: The Brewers will place RP Corey Knebel on the disabled list on Friday, April 6th, according to MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy.
  • PHI: SP Jake Arrieta will be recalled on Sunday April 8th, according to Matt Gelb of The Athletic. He will be making his Phillies debut versus the Marlins.
  • STL: RP Greg Holland could be recalled as early as Monday April 9th, according to Brian Stull of stlbaseballweekly.com.
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Minor MLB Transactions: 4/5/18

By Steve Adams | April 5, 2018 at 6:45pm CDT

Here are Thursday’s minor moves from around the game…

  • The Braves outrighted reliever Miguel Socolovich to Triple-A Gwinnett following his recent DFA, and David O’Brien of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution tweets that he accepted the assignment. As a player who’d previously been outrighted off a 40-man roster, Socolovich could’ve rejected the assignment in favor of free agency but will instead remain with the club. Socolovich appeared in one game with the Braves, during which he tossed two perfect innings with a pair of punchouts. Prior to this abbreviated Atlanta stint, the 31-year-old spent three seasons in the Cardinals organization, totaling 66 1/3 innings of relief. With the Cards, Socolovich logged a 3.80 ERA with 7.7 K/9, 2.6 BB/9 and a 44.1 percent ground-ball rate.
  • The Mariners released veteran backstop Tuffy Gosewisch from their roster at Triple-A Tacoma, as Rainiers broadcaster Mike Curto reports (Twitter link). The 34-year-old Gosewisch went just 2-for-28 with the Mariners last season, though one of those two hits was a homer. He’s a career .190/.228/.271 hitter in 447 MLB plate appearances, though he’s also slashed a drastically superior .258/.318/.406 in his Triple-A career.
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Atlanta Braves Seattle Mariners Transactions Miguel Socolovich Tuffy Gosewisch

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NL East Notes: Neshek, Kapler, Kolek, Harvey

By Jeff Todd | April 5, 2018 at 4:37pm CDT

The Phillies received good news after righty Pat Neshek underwent an MRI, as Todd Zolecki of MLB.com tweets. There’s some inflammation, as might have been expected given that he had identified an issue, but nothing more concerning than that. The expectation at this point, though, is that Neshek will remain on ice for “a couple more weeks” to allow things to calm down. Philadelphia has yet to receive a contribution from Neshek or fellow recent signee Tommy Hunter, though as Zolecki recently tweeted, it seems Hunter is nearing his return and perhaps Neshek won’t be far behind.

Here’s more from the NL East:

  • New Phillies skipper Gabe Kapler was again forced to defend his early-season decision-making, as Zolecki also writes. This time, the questions arose in relation to defensive positioning, yet another area in which the Philadelphia club is experimenting with unconventional methods. Interested readers will want to review the full post for the details. Generally, though, Kapler again emphasized that he believes the process will pay dividends in the long run, even if the short-term results have raised the ire of many Phillies fans.
  • Former top Marlins pick Tyler Kolek has been scratched from his first scheduled start of the new season, as Sam Dykstra of MiLB.com tweets. He’ll instead go on the minor-league DL. Details aren’t known at this point, but it’s hardly an auspicious start for the 22-year-old, who has thrown just 3 2/3 innings over the past two seasons in large part due to Tommy John surgery. Kolek, now 22 years of age, was the No. 2 overall selection in the 2014 draft.
  • Of course, things can change quickly — in either direction — for a pitcher, particularly when health issues are involved. The Mets and Matt Harvey know that as well as anyone. As James Wagner of the New York Times wrote after Harvey’s first start of the new season, the once-dominant, then dumped-on hurler has shown signs of reemerging as a new but potentially effective starter in his final season of team control. Wagner notes that the Mets fielded trade interest in Harvey this offseason but opted not to sell low on the right-hander — in part at the behest of newly hired manager Mickey Callaway and new pitching coach Dave Eiland. A free agent at season’s end, Harvey opened the year with five shutout innings, during which he yielded just one hit and one walk with five strikeouts.
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Miami Marlins New York Mets Philadelphia Phillies Matt Harvey Pat Neshek Tommy Hunter Tyler Kolek

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    Mets Select Richard Lovelady, DFA Wander Suero

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