Brewers To Promote Cooper Pratt
The Brewers are calling shortstop prospect Cooper Pratt up to the major leagues, as confirmed by MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy. There was plenty of “hug watch” social media buzz about Pratt’s possible promotion during Triple-A Nashville’s game today, as teammates were seen congratulating Pratt in the dugout during the sixth inning.
Pratt will be making his Major League debut whenever he appears in a game, which will surely come on Tuesday when the Brewers host the Guardians. Pratt was already added to the 40-man roster when he finalized his eight-year, $50.75MM extension with the Brewers in early April, so only a 26-man roster move will need to made as the corresponding transaction on Tuesday.
The $50.75MM marked the third-largest extension ever guaranteed to a player without any Major League experience, and it came just a few days into Pratt’s first season of Triple-A ball. The Brewers wanted to give Pratt some more minor league seasoning before giving him a look in the majors, and the infielder has delivered an okay but unspectacular slash line of .244/.353/.392 over 258 PA with Nashville.
While the Brewers certainly aren’t going to rush Pratt before they think he’s ready for the Show, the total lack of offense being provided by starting shortstop Joey Ortiz is surely a factor in Milwaukee’s decision. Ortiz is still providing quality defense at short but is hitting only .207/.299/.262 over 170 plate appearances. Regular third baseman Luis Rengifo is posting similar numbers, so the entire left side of the infield has been a glaring weakness for the NL Central leaders.
David Hamilton has been getting an increasing share of the playing time at both third base and shortstop, so the Brewers’ plan could be to have Hamilton, Rengifo, and Ortiz in a timeshare at third base and in a bench role, while giving Pratt an everyday assignment in his first taste of the big leagues. The right-handed hitting Pratt has been a lot more productive against lefties than against righties at Triple-A, so the Brew Crew could also spell Pratt against some tougher right-handed pitching.
The pricey extension put a big spotlight on a player who was viewed as a solid but not necessarily blue-chip prospect heading into 2026. The preseason prospect rankings saw Pratt land 50th on Baseball America’s list, while MLB Pipeline (62nd), ESPN (70th), and The Athletic’s Keith Law (99th) were less bullish on the 21-year-old’s future potential.
Defensively, Pratt is considered to have a good enough glove to stick as a big league shortstop. He has also swiped 79 bags in 88 attempts over his minor league career, so Pratt should fit right into a speedy Brewers team. The question with Pratt is now well his bat can translate against MLB pitching, and his so-so results at Nashville haven’t done much to quiet the doubters.
Milwaukee obviously felt strongly enough about Pratt’s potential to lock him into such a big commitment, even if evaluators felt Pratt was maybe the fourth-best infielder in the Brewers’ farm system. Jesus Made is arguably the top prospect in all of baseball and Luis Pena and Jett Williams are also highly-touted top-100 types, though Pratt is viewed as the most polished defensive shortstop of the group.
Though naturally much can change over the long time, the Brewers might view their infield of the future as Pratt at shortstop, Made and Pena at second or third base in some combination, and Williams in the outfield. This scenario also assumes that Brice Turang will be (like so many established Brewers veterans) traded before he reaches free agency, but that day is a while away since Turang is arbitration-controlled through 2029.
There’s no such thing as having “too many” promising young infielders, of course, and the Brewers’ player development system continues to be the envy of most franchises. Milwaukee has been aggressive in locking up its top prospect to pre-career extensions, between Pratt, Jackson Chourio, and (just a few days ago) outfield prospect Luis Lara.
Diamondbacks Outright Aramis Garcia
TODAY: Garcia has cleared waivers and been outrighted to Triple-A, according to his MLB.com profile page. There isn’t yet any word as to whether or not Garcia has accepted the assignment or elected free agency.
JUNE 12: As expected, infielder/outfielder Jordan Lawlar has been reinstated from the 60-day injured list. In a corresponding move, the Diamondbacks have designated catcher Aramis Garcia for assignment. Over the next week, the D-backs must either trade Garcia or place him on waivers. If he clears waivers, Arizona could send him outright to Triple-A Reno, although he’d have the right to reject that assignment in favor of free agency.
This is the second DFA of the season for Garcia. Arizona first selected his contract in mid-April, after Gabriel Moreno suffered an oblique strain. When Moreno returned, Garcia got the boot. He then cleared waivers and accepted an outright assignment to Reno. A couple of weeks later, the D-backs called on him again, this time to replace an injured James McCann. It’s a pattern Garcia has gotten used to over the years. The 33-year-old has appeared in seven MLB seasons dating back to 2018, suiting up for the Giants, Athletics, Reds, Phillies, and Diamondbacks. In all that time, he has played a total of 129 games.
Garcia was the third catcher on Arizona’s active roster, along with Moreno and Adrian Del Castillo. The D-backs could return to a three-catcher setup once McCann returns from the IL, which might be in the next week or two, barring a setback. However, they probably don’t need three catchers. In the six weeks Garcia has spent with the big league team this year, he has only appeared in eight games, catching 50 innings and stepping to the plate 19 times.
Unless he really struggles, Lawlar will be a lot more valuable than a third backstop. Formerly Arizona’s consensus top prospect, he graduated from rookie status in 2025, although he has still only amassed 128 major league plate appearances in his career. In other words, he has huge potential, but he also has a ton to prove. Not only is he trying to live up to his top-prospect pedigree, but he’s coming back from a broken wrist, and he’s adjusting to a new position. Lawlar came up as a shortstop, but Geraldo Perdomo is blocking him there, and the presence of Ketel Marte and Nolan Arenado means he can’t make the easier transition to second or third base. So, Lawlar will be learning to play the outfield for the Diamondbacks this year. Prior to his injury, he started five games in left field and one in center. He also moved between left and center field during his minor league rehab assignment.
Arizona had one of the best offenses in the National League in 2024 and ’25, but so far in 2026, that hasn’t been the case. Things have been particularly bad as of late. Over the past two weeks, no team has scored less often than the D-backs. What this club really needs is another lefty bat, but until they can find one, they’ll have to hope that the return of a former star prospect injects some energy into their lineup.
Giants Notes: Winn, Gage, Mahle, Ramos
The Giants placed right-hander Keaton Winn on the 15-day injured list, with a retroactive placement date of June 11. Right-hander Tristan Beck was called up from Triple-A in the corresponding move.
Winn is dealing with a right elbow strain, though Giants manager Tony Vitello downplayed the seriousness of the strain when speaking with MLB.com’s Maria Guardado (separate links) and other reporters. The reliever could be able to start throwing again in a “handful” of days, as per Vitello, and it doesn’t appear as though an MRI revealed any notable structural damage.
As Guardado noted, even a seemingly minor elbow issue is notable given Winn’s injury history, which includes a Tommy John surgery and an ulnar nerve transposition surgery. His lack of durability was one reason San Francisco moved Winn (once a touted starting pitching prospect) into a relief role last year, and Winn has pitched pretty well coming out of the pen in 2026.
Over 30 2/3 innings this season, Winn has a 3.23 ERA, 21.8% strikeout rate, and 7.6% walk rate. A .235 BABIP has certainly contributed to Winn’s success, but hitters aren’t getting much on the ball when they do put it in play. Winn’s 27.7% hard-hit ball rate ranks in the 96th percentile of all pitchers, and his 4.8% barrel rate is also very strong.
Winn’s numbers were even better before a slump that saw the righty post an 8.53 ERA over his last five outings and 6 1/3 IP. That tough stretch included appearances in three straight games on June 6-8, and Winn was tagged for three runs in two-third of an inning in the last of those outings on June 8 (which was his last game before his IL stint).
These recent struggles aside, Winn has been one of the more reliable members of an overall inconsistent Giants bullpen. Beck is up in the majors for the third time this season and is looking to improve on a 9.00 ERA over his eight innings of MLB action. Left-hander Matt Gage also might not be far away from a return, as Gage began a minor league rehab assignment on Saturday. Gage posted a 2.63 ERA (albeit with some shaky peripherals) over his first 24 innings before a bout of knee inflammation sent him to the 15-day IL on June 2.
On the rotation front, Tyler Mahle is slated to begin a Triple-A rehab assignment today. Mahle hasn’t pitched since May 26, as a left hamstring strain sent him to the 15-day IL the next day. While it looks like the strain wasn’t too severe, the injury added to a tough beginning to Mahle’s San Francisco tenure.
After signing a one-year, $10MM free agent deal this past winter, Mahle posted a 6.04 ERA over his first 56 2/3 innings in the Giants rotation. Mahle’s 4.17 SIERA is more palatable and it reflects his .331 BABIP, but the right-hander hasn’t helped his cause by allowing 11 home runs.
Mahle will probably rejoin the rotation in place of Trevor McDonald, who has been a useful fill-in first for Logan Webb and now for Mahle. Guardado suggests that the trade deadline could factor into the Giants’ thinking in giving Mahle more time to right the ship as a starter, as an in-form Mahle is a natural trade candidate if the Giants can’t get back into contention.
Turning to position players, Guardado writes that Heliot Ramos could also be close to starting a rehab assignment. Ramos sustained a right quad strain while trying to make a sliding catch in the Giants’ 5-2 loss to the Athletics on May 15, but after a month of recovery time, Ramos’ baseball activity has progressed to the point that he looks to be nearing some on-field action in the minors. Ramos was hitting .267/.307/.424 with four homers in 176 PA at the time of his injury.
Twins Select Kyler Fedko, Designate Orlando Arcia
The Twins announced that they have selected the contract of outfield prospect Kyler Fedko from Triple-A St. Paul. Infielder Orlando Arcia was designated for assignment, creating space for Fedko on both the 26-man and 40-man rosters.
Arcia signed a minor league deal with Minnesota in Janury, and his contract was selected to the active roster on May 19 when Royce Lewis was optioned down to Triple-A. With Lewis now back in the Show for over a week, the Twins will shuffle their position player alignment once more in bringing Fedko up as depth for both the outfield and perhaps in the infield mix. Fedko has a good deal of experience as a first baseman, and he had his first two professional appearances as a second baseman while playing for St. Paul this year.
A 12th-round pick for the Twins in the 2021 draft, Fedko isn’t ranked by either MLB Pipeline or Baseball America as a top-30 prospect within Minnesota’s farm system. Nevertheless, Fedko has now earned his first ticket to the majors on the strength of some very impressive hitting numbers over the last two seasons, including a .278/.364/.532 slash line and 23 home runs over 426 Triple-A plate appearances.
The 26-year-old Fedko can play all three outfield positions, and he has 47 stolen bases (out of 59 attempts) over the last two seasons at the Double-A and Triple-A levels. With a lot of his offensive production coming against southpaws, the right-handed hitting Fedko provides a natural complement to Trevor Larnach or Kody Clemens in the corner outfield slots. With Fedko now on hand, Clemens might get moved back to more regular infield duty rather than playing on the grass.
Arcia hit .271/.300/.354 over 50 PA for the Twins, which isn’t far off the .240/.292/.369 slash line he has posted over 3587 career PA over 11 Major League seasons. Formerly a regular with the Brewers and Braves, Arcia’s long career has included a World Series ring with Atlanta in 2021 and an All-Star appearance as recently as 2023, but he is best known as a defensive specialist in his heyday.
Since Arcia has more than enough MLB service time to reject an outright assignment, he’ll get to make the next call on his future if he clears waivers. He can choose to remain with the Twins as a Triple-A depth piece, or elect free agency in lieu of an outright assignment and look for an opportunity elsewhere. For what it’s worth, Arcia already declined an opt-out opportunity in his minor league deal when he didn’t make Minnesota’s Opening Day roster, so he could be content again to stick with the organization and wait for his next selection.
Royals Place Vinnie Pasquantino On IL With Hamate Fracture
1:56 pm: Pasquantino underwent surgery for the hamate fracture this morning, according to manager Matt Quatraro (via broadcaster Joel Goldberg). The timeline on Pasquantino is roughly four to six weeks.
10:00 am: The Royals have placed first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino on the 10-day injured list with a right hamate fracture, per a team announcement. Outfielder John Rave is being recalled in a corresponding active roster move.
Pasquantino suffered the injury in the fifth inning of yesterday’s 8-7 loss to the Astros. Facing Houston’s Mike Burrows, Pasquantino swung at an inside pitch and popped out to third base. He immediately grimaced after the swing and ultimately left the game (video courtesy of MLB.com). Jac Caglianone slide from right field to first base, and Isaac Collins took Pasquantino’s spot in the lineup, playing left field.
The hamate fracture is the same injury suffered by the Twins’ Ryan Jeffers and more recently the Guardians’ José Ramírez. The Royals have not yet announced a timeline on Pasquantino, but as noted by MLBTR’s Steve Adams, hamate fractures tend to sideline players for four to five weeks. Jeffers landed on the IL on May 19th and is expected back in July, per the Twins’ official injury report. Others like Corbin Carroll and Francisco Lindor returned within the expected time frame, while the Orioles’ Jackson Holliday took about three months after experiencing setbacks.
At a minimum, Pasquantino will be out of action through the All-Star break. That will leave the Royals without a key player, albeit one who has struggled in 2026. Pasquantino has so far batted .224/.309/.350 in 291 plate appearances, which is 19% below average by wRC+. That’s a far cry from last year, when Pasquantino was 16% above average, and it’s easily the worst mark of his career. Adding in his subpar defense, the 28-year-old has been below replacement level this year.
Pasquantino’s drop in hard contact is the biggest culprit for his downturn at the plate. He had a 44.7% hard-hit rate last year, but that’s fallen to 37.7% in 2026, which ranks in the 34th percentile according to Statcast. Pasquantino is also running a career-low 88.5 MPH average exit velocity. There’s some evidence that he’s gotten unlucky, as Pasquantino’s .350 slugging percentage lags behind his .394 expected slugging. However, even the latter mark would be a career low, so the reality is that Pasquantino is both unlucky and a lesser hitter this year.
For now, the Royals will probably go with the alignment they used last night after Pasquantino’s exit: Caglianone at first base, then Collins and Lane Thomas in the outfield corners. Caglianone has rarely played first base in the Majors, though he played 516 innings there in the minors from 2024-25. Caglianone is hitting very well this year (118 wRC+), so he can get by if he’s even a passable defender. Offensively, the net result of Pasquantino’s injury is swapping him out for more of Thomas. The latter’s 99 wRC+ is technically below average but still exceeds Pasquantino’s output this year.
In the meantime, Rave gets called up to fill in as a backup outfielder. Rave, a fifth-round draft pick by Kansas City in 2019, debuted last year and batted .196/.283/.307 in 175 plate appearances, which amounted to a 65 wRC+. In contrast, he’s batted .278/.395/.475 with a 126 wRC+ at Triple-A this year, his third straight season of above-average output at that level. Rave has two option years remaining and will probably get sent down when Pasquantino returns.
Photo courtesy of Denny Medley, Imagn Images
Padres Select Blake Hunt, Designate Ty Adcock For Assignment
The Padres have selected the contract of catcher Blake Hunt from Triple-A El Paso, according to a team announcement. Catcher Freddy Fermin is going on the 7-day concussion injured list in the meantime. To clear room for Hunt on the 40-man roster, right-hander Ty Adcock is being designated for assignment.
Fermin was warming up reliever Yuki Matsui for the bottom of the sixth when Matsui spiked a pitch in the dirt. Fermin turned his head and the ball struck him on the left side of his head after the bounce. Rodolfo Durán took over for Fermin behind the plate. Manager Craig Stammen described Fermin’s injury as more severe than that of Xander Bogaerts, as relayed by Annie Heilbrunn of the San Diego Sports Association. Bogaerts was drilled in the head by the Orioles’ Trey Gibson in the top of the fifth and eventually left the game as well.
Stammen added that Fermin has been hit a lot this season, so the team will proceed with caution. Durán will start behind the plate in the meantime, with Hunt serving as his backup. Hunt, 28, will be making his major league debut when he gets into a game. The Padres drafted him in Competitive Balance Round B back in 2017. Hunt stayed in the organization through 2019 before minor league contests were canceled during the COVID season. He was traded to the Rays in the Blake Snell deal and also made stops in the Orioles and Mariners organizations before making his way back to San Diego this year.
Hunt has only made 58 plate appearances this year thanks to an oblique injury which put him on the 60-day injured list through May 17th. He was solid last year, hitting .272/.368/.452 with a 108 wRC+ in 280 plate appearances for the Mariners’ Triple-A affiliate. Hunt showcased decent power in that time, hitting eight home runs and running a .180 isolated slugging percentage, although he also benefited from a .331 average on balls in play.
The Padres now have four catchers on the 40-man roster including Hunt. More than likely, the career minor leaguer is in for a short stint in the Majors. Luis Campusano is currently out with a left big toe fracture. He has not yet started a rehab assignment, although the team’s official injury report has him coming back later this month. Campusano is also out of options. In the long term, if the Padres only want to carry three catchers on the 40-man roster, one option would be to option Fermin and designate Hunt for assignment. In any case, Hunt’s lack of big league experience could make him the odd man out behind Durán, Campusano, and Fermin.
Adcock, 29, loses his 40-man roster spot and will now be put up on waivers. He has not appeared in the Majors this year, and his big league resume consists of just 23 innings with a 5.48 ERA from 2023-25. Adcock has an ugly 7.15 ERA in 11 1/3 minor league innings this year, and he’s never had an ERA below 4.66 in a full season at Triple-A. Having been outrighted by the Mets last year, Adcock would have the right to refuse an outright this time around if he goes unclaimed, which seems likely.
Photo courtesy of Jayne Kamin-Oncea, Imagn Images
White Sox Sign Javy Guerra To Minor League Deal
The White Sox have added veteran reliever Javy Guerra on a minor league agreement, according to his transaction tracker on MLB.com. Atlanta’s Triple-A affiliate released the right-hander on Thursday. It didn’t take long for Guerra to find a new club.
Guerra had spent the past two seasons with the Hanshin Tigers of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball. He returned to the States this year, inking a minor league deal with Atlanta in January. The righty was tagged for five earned runs over 2 2/3 innings in Spring Training. Guerra scuffled to a 5.68 ERA across 16 appearances with Gwinnett. He had three more walks (20) than strikeouts (17).
The 30-year-old Guerra has spent parts of five big-league seasons with three teams. He most recently pitched with the Rays in 2023. The majority of Guerra’s innings in the majors have come with the Padres. He debuted with San Diego in 2019 and was an occasional member of the bullpen for four seasons.
Guerra has an ERA well above 6.00 as a big leaguer. Walks have typically been his biggest issue. He’s issued free passes at a massive 14.3% clip over 63 MLB innings. Guerra did put together a strong campaign with Hanshin in 2024. He fired 58 innings with a 1.55 ERA. The righty recorded 14 saves. More importantly, he trimmed his walk rate to 4.9%. Guerra only pitched in six games during his second season with Hanshin.
Photo courtesy of Jim Cowsert, Imagn Images
Angels Outright Omar Martinez
The Angels announced that catcher Omar Martinez has cleared waivers and was assigned outright to Triple-A Salt Lake. The backstop was designated for assignment last week in a series of moves that included outfielder Gustavo Campero being added to the 40-man roster. Campero had a looming opt-out clause in his deal.
Martinez appeared in five games with the Angels. Most of his time with the club came on defense, as he totaled just three plate appearances. The 24-year-old did manage his first hit, drilling a single in his debut at-bat. Martinez went 0-for-2 in his lone start.
The Angels added Martinez on a minor league deal in November. He’d spent his entire pro career in the Yankees organization. New York signed him as an international free agent out of Venezuela in 2018. Martinez put together some strong offensive seasons at the lower rungs of the minors, but has struggled at the upper levels. He hit .212 in his first stop at Double-A last year. The backstop posted a 63 wRC+ in 23 games after moving to Triple-A.
Martinez has slashed .189/.308/.369 with Salt Lake this season. He’s popped six home runs in 130 plate appearances, but he’s also struck out at a 33.1% clip. Martinez will head back to the Bees after no team put in a claim during the waiver process. This is the first time he’s been outrighted, so he had to accept the minor league assignment.
Los Angeles has had a tough time finding consistent production behind the plate this season. The club ranks 23rd in OPS at the position heading into Saturday. Logan O’Hoppe has a 76 wRC+ through 46 games. He’s struggled mightily with the glove, posting -8 Defensive Runs Saved. Travis d’Arnaud had an identical 76 wRC+ through 40 plate appearances as O’Hoppe’s backup. He’s now on the 60-day IL with plantar fasciitis. Sebastian Rivero is backing up O’Hoppe now. He’s been solid as a defender (2 DRS), but he has a sub-.600 OPS.
Photo courtesy of Gerry Angus, Imagn Images
Rockies Select Eiberson Castellano, Outright Valente Bellozo
The Rockies have selected the contract of right-hander Eiberson Castellano, the team announced. When he appears in a game, it will be his MLB debut. Castellano will take the 40-man roster spot of righty Valente Bellozo. The veteran has already cleared waivers and accepted an outright assignment to Triple-A. Right-hander Jeff Criswell was optioned to open a spot on the big-league club for Castellano.
The 25-year-old Castellano joined the organization on a minor league deal in December. He put together a 2.72 ERA across 10 starts at Double-A to open the season. The Rockies bumped Castellano to Triple-A, where he fired six scoreless innings in his lone start in the hitter-friendly PCL. He’s now on the move again, getting the big-league call as Colorado looks to add a fresh arm to a battered bullpen.
Castellano showed a five-pitch mix in his lone start with Albuquerque. He led with a curveball/four-seamer tandem, followed by a slider, sinker, and changeup. Castellano sat in the mid-90s with the fastball and sinker. It’s a hard slider, averaging nearly 90 mph. Castellano has posted solid strikeout numbers at times in the minors, but walks have tended to be an issue. He has a 23.8% strikeout rate and an 11.5% walk rate in 59 innings this year.
Bellozo didn’t break camp with the team, but was up during the first full week of the season. He was hammered for nine earned runs in 10 2/3 innings out of the bullpen. The 26-year-old was sent back to Triple-A in mid-April. He hasn’t been much better with the Isotopes, posting an 8.83 ERA across 12 appearances.
It isn’t much of a surprise that Bellozo didn’t garner any attention on the waiver wire, considering his performance this season. He’ll stick in the Colorado organization as a depth option in the minors. Bellozo put together a pair of respectable seasons with the Marlins, including 13 starts with a 3.67 ERA as a rookie in 2024. There’s a decent chance he gets another shot at eating some innings with the Rockies later this year.
Criswell made his return from Tommy John surgery at the end of May. He tossed two scoreless innings with the big-league club. Criswell has provided solid results in his limited time in the majors, but he’s racked up 49 pitches over the past three days, so Colorado swapped him out. Criswell was one of four relievers pressed into service behind Sean Sullivan on Friday. Sullivan was lifted after three innings with an illness.
Photo courtesy of Chris Tilley, Imagn Images
Rangers Place Evan Carter On 10-Day IL With Oblique Strain
Rangers outfielder Evan Carter is heading to the 10-day injured list with a right oblique strain, the team announced. The Rangers recalled infielder/outfielder Cody Freeman from Triple-A Round Rock to take Carter’s roster spot.
Injuries have been an all-too-frequent occurrence during a frustrating career for Carter, who left a loss to the Red Sox on Friday with what was described as soreness. He will now hit the IL for the fifth time since he debuted in September 2023. The 23-year-old appeared in just 108 of a possible 324 regular-season games from 2024-25. Carter had been much healthier this year until this injury cropped up, as he played in 66 of the Rangers’ first 69 games. The severity of his latest malady is unclear, but oblique problems often lead to lengthy absences.
The lefty-swinging Carter looked like a future star when the Rangers promoted him to the majors. He slashed .306/.413/.645 over a 23-game, 75-plate appearance span to close out the regular season. Carter followed that up by hitting .300/.417/.500 in 72 trips to the plate during a playoff run that concluded with the Rangers’ World Series victory over the Diamondbacks.
Carter was riding plenty of momentum going into 2024, but lower back troubles held him to 45 games and kept him out from late May onward. He hit a meek .188/.272/.361 with five home runs in 162 plate appearances that year. Carter’s performance improved in 2025, in which he batted .247/.336/.392 with five HRs and 14 stolen bases, but quadriceps, back and wrist troubles limited him to 63 games and 220 PA.
While Carter has been the Rangers’ primary center fielder this year, his offense has backslid. He is going on the shelf with a .176/.292/.321 line, six homers and 10 steals in 229 trips to the plate. Carter’s .209 batting average on balls in play suggests he has been unlucky, but his xBA, xSLG and xwOBA all rank in the league’s bottom 19th percentile or worse. Lefties have been especially hard on Carter, who has gone a miserable 1 for 27 with a single, 11 strikeouts and three walks against them.
Michael Helman, the Rangers’ second option in center this year, will start there on Saturday against the Red Sox. He could get most of the work at the position while Carter is out. Corner outfielders Wyatt Langford and Brandon Nimmo also have experience in center, though the latter hasn’t seen much action there since 2023.
Photo courtesy of Jerome Miron, Imagn Images
