A week after trade to the Twins, Jaime García is now a Yankee.

Search

Active member
Handicapper
Joined
Jun 18, 2007
Messages
77,721
Tokens
DF_AGoEXUAEP7VR.jpg


The New York Yankees have agreed to a trade for left-hander Jaime Garcia with the Minnesota Twins.
The Yankees announced the deal Sunday. Garcia, a free agent after the season, will be changing teams for the second time in less than a week; he joined Minnesota on Monday after the Atlanta Braves dealt him, catcher Anthony Recker and cash considerations for a minor league pitching prospect.
The Yankees will send minor league pitchers Zack Littell and Dietrich Enns to the Twins as part of the swap and will also receive cash considerations from Minnesota.
The first-place Yankees also have been in active trade talks with the Oakland Athletics about ace Sonny Gray, according to ESPN and multiple reports. Garcia's acquisition does not prevent the Yankees from adding Gray, a source told ESPN's Buster Olney.
Garcia made one start for the Twins, allowing three runs on eight hits over 6 2/3 innings in a 6-3 win over the Athletics on Friday. The 31-year-old is 5-7 with a 4.29 ERA in 19 starts this season.
The 26-year-old Enns was 2-1 with a 1.99 ERA in eight games (seven starts) with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and the Gulf Coast League.
The 21-year-old Littell was 14-1 with a 1.87 ERA in 20 combined games (18 starts) with Class A Tampa and Double-A Trenton. He was acquired by the Yankees from the Seattle Mariners for reliever James Pazos in November.
 

Active member
Handicapper
Joined
Jun 18, 2007
Messages
77,721
Tokens
I think the Yankees are going to win the East......The Red Sox are overrated.

They miss Big Papi.
 

Rx Alchemist.
Joined
Aug 16, 2007
Messages
3,334
Tokens

Active member
Handicapper
Joined
Jun 18, 2007
Messages
77,721
Tokens
What is wrong with the AL East’s ‘most talented team’?

What if before this season we told you that the Red Sox’s trades for Chris Sale and Craig Kimbrel would prove golden? That Sale would be the best pitcher in the AL — and not by a little bit — and that Kimbrel would be the best reliever in the league as well?
You combine that with Boston’s excellent young core of position players, and even in a post-Papi world, that team would dominate the AL East, right?
Except Sale is going to win the AL Cy Young award easily and Kimbrel has struck out more than half the batters he has faced, and the Red Sox awoke Saturday morning a second-place team awash in controversy and with their head of baseball operations, Dave Dombrowski, saying there are no more big moves coming via trade.
“They really should be winning by a large margin,” an AL official said. “They don’t have a sense of unity. They don’t play with structure. They have a weird team dynamic. All the drama is distracting.”
The drama includes dealing with the horrible free-agent signing of the 2014-15 offseason, Pablo Sandoval, who played so poorly that the Red Sox released him on July 19 with roughly $49 million left on his pact.
It also includes the horrible free-agent signing of the 2015-16 offseason, David Price, who temperamentally fits Boston like skinny jeans on Sandoval. He has warred with the most provincial baseball media in the country, notably laying into Red Sox broadcaster and Hall of Famer Dennis Eckersley on a team flight, which has led to weeks of back-and-forth on who said what and who needed to apologize and didn’t.
That would all be fine if Price were excelling on the mound. He’s not. He has not pitched liked a $217 million man, and just went on the disabled list again with a forearm issue amid growing concern he will ultimately need Tommy John surgery.
Besides all of that, an offense that led the AL in scoring by a staggering 101 runs in 2016 is seventh this year, largely because Boston had nine fewer homers than any other AL squad entering Saturday. It turns out David Ortiz meant more to this lineup than the color blue means to the American flag.
Still, on July 7 the Red Sox led the AL East by 4 ¹/₂ games. The Yankees were reeling, and when Boston rallied to beat Aroldis Chapman a week later to open the second half, the Yankees were braced to be knocked out with three more games in two days looming at Fenway Park. Matt Holliday’s tying ninth-inning homer off Kimbrel the next day, and the Yankees’ eventual 16-inning triumph might be remembered as the key pivot of this season.
“The Red Sox are easily the most talented team [in the AL East],” an NL executive said. “I thought they were going to pull away in July and then it stalled. The Price thing is such a dark cloud and emphasizes the perils of signing in a place you hate.”
Boston still has the talent to right itself and soar to the division title. But after a bunch of prospect-dispersing, win-now deals, Dombrowski has indicated the spigot is off. Dustin Pedroia has had to stand in front of the media and give a state-of-the-Red Sox, I-am-the-leader message. And the questions persist around the sport — why is such a talented team playing so uncomfortably and below its skill level?
 

Active member
Handicapper
Joined
Jun 18, 2007
Messages
77,721
Tokens

Active member
Handicapper
Joined
Jun 18, 2007
Messages
77,721
Tokens
Royals are 3 out of the division and they are the 2nd place wild card team.

Playing well.
 

Active member
Handicapper
Joined
Jun 18, 2007
Messages
77,721
Tokens

Active member
Handicapper
Joined
Jun 18, 2007
Messages
77,721
Tokens
The Chicago White Sox traded outfielder Melky Cabrera to the Kansas City Royals on Sunday for two prospects.
Chicago received right-hander A.J. Puckett and left-hander Andre Davis from Kansas City.
The Royals also received cash considerations in the deal. Cabrera is making $15 million this season and will become a free agent after this season.
Davis is the 13th ranked player in the Royals' farm system while Puckett is No. 22, according to MLB.com.
Cabrera, 32, is hitting .295 with 13 home runs and 56 RBIs this season in 98 games (428 plate appearances).
The Royals entered Sunday's game with a 54-48 record and are in second place in the AL Central, three games behind the division-leading Cleveland Indians.
The trade marks a return to Kansas City for Cabrera, who also played for the Royals in 2011.
Davis, 23, is 5-4 with a 4.83 ERA in 18 starts for Lexington, the Royals' Class A team in the South Atlantic League. Puckett, 22, is 9-7 with a 3.90 ERA in 20 starts for Wilmington, the Royals' advanced Class A team in the Carolina League.
In 13 major league seasons Cabrera has a .286 average, 127 home runs and 739 RBIs in 1,618 games for the Yankees, Blue Jays, Royals, Giants, Braves and White Sox.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,108,689
Messages
13,453,424
Members
99,428
Latest member
callgirls
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com