The Mets had the most unfortunate, but on brand, collapse possible against the Phillies

Never change, Mets.

New year, same New York Mets it seems. In the Mets first game of the 2021 MLB season on Monday, New York was holding onto a 2-0 lead over the Philadelphia Phillies in the bottom of the eighth before the team committed the most on brand collapse you’ll see.

Jacob deGrom held the Phillies to just three hits and no runs through six innings, but was pulled after 77 pitches as the game was handed over to the Mets bullpen. Unfortunately for New York and deGrom, the Mets went full Mets in the bottom of the eighth inning, not only allowing the Phillies to tie the game but also take a 5-2 lead.

It started with the bases loaded and Aaron Loup on the mound for the Mets facing Bryce Harper with one out. Loup hit Harper with a pitch, sending a runner in to score to put the game within one for the Phillies. Following Harper, J.T. Realmuto singled with a hit through the infield to tie the game at 2-2 with the bases still loaded.

Then, disaster struck. Alec Bohm hit what seemed to be a routine ball to third baseman Luis Guillorme, but the throw home hit catcher James McCann in the glove and bounced behind the plate, allowing Rhys Hoskins and Harper to score for the 4-2 Phillies lead.

Yep, that happened.

The Phillies scored once more in the bottom of the eighth, eventually winning the game 5-3 after coming from behind on some pure Mets shenanigans to improve to 4-0 on the season.

As for deGrom’s gem of a start, well…

Unfortunate stuff right there.

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Atlanta Braves vs Philadelphia Phillies live stream, , TV channel, how to watch MLB Opening Day

The Atlanta Braves will open up the season on the road when they face the Philadelphia Phillies from Citizens Bank Park on Thursday.

The Atlanta Braves will open up the season on the road when they face the Philadelphia Phillies from Citizens Bank Park on Thursday afternoon.

The Braves are coming off a successful year after winning the NL East Division title and will look to continue that momentum this season. As for the Phillies, they will need some more production out of one of baseball’s highest-paid players, Bryce Harper. Last year was another struggle, finishing below .500 for the 9th straight season.

MLB players and coaches will be wearing these awesome official on-field face coverings throughout the 2021 season.

Here is everything you need to know to catch the action this afternoon.

Atlanta Braves vs Philadelphia Phillies

Starting Pitchers:

ATL: Max Fried, LHP

PHI: Aaron Nola, RHP

MLB Odds and Betting Lines

MLB odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds last updated Thursday at 2:30 p.m. ET.

Atlanta Braves (+115) vs. Philadelphia Phillies (-130)

O/U: 7

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Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto has fracture in right thumb

Bucks County Courier Times’ Tom Moore breaks down J.T. Realmuto ‘s thumb injury and what it means moving forward for the Phillies.

Bucks County Courier Times’ Tom Moore breaks down J.T. Realmuto ‘s thumb injury and what it means moving forward for the Phillies.

Notre Dame Product A.J. Pollock is World Series Champion with Dodgers

For the first time since Brad Lidge with the Philadelphia Phillies in 2008, a former Notre Dame player has won a World Series title.

For the first time since Brad Lidge with the Philadelphia Phillies in 2008, a former Notre Dame player has won a World Series title. That player is Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder A.J. Pollock, whose team won its first championship since 1988 on Tuesday. Though he had only one double and one walk in seven plate appearances during the Fall Classic, he’ll surely take a ring in his second season in Los Angeles.

Pollock’s seven seasons with the Arizona Diamondbacks included an All-Star selection and Gold Glove in 2015. After reaching the playoffs only once during that time, he took his talents to Chavez Ravine for a four-year, $55 million deal beginning in 2019. During the pandemic-shortened regular season, he tied with Mookie Betts for the team lead in home runs with 16. He also posted a slash line of .276/.314/.566 and had 34 RBIs over 55 games.

Congratulations to A.J. for playing a role in making the City of Angels the city of champions in 2020.

John Kruk absolutely lost it on the Phillies broadcast over Joe West’s controversial call

He was MAD.

There are several big-league umpires who baseball fans dread seeing on the schedule to work their games. Obviously, Angel Hernandez is at the top of that list, but Joe West isn’t too far behind.

Even when West makes the right call, he does it in a way that enrages baseball fans. It had Phillies broadcaster John Kruk throwing a tantrum on the air.

West was the first base umpire for Game 2 of the Phillies’ doubleheader with the Nationals on Tuesday when he made a controversial interpretation of MLB rules to cost Philadelphia a stolen base in the eighth inning (extra innings in this seven-inning format).

According to West, the Phillies’ Alec Bohm made contact with Kurt Suzuki’s leg on his backswing, which negated Roman Quinn’s attempt at stealing third.

Neither Quinn nor Bohm were called out, which could have been the case in an interference scenario. West applied MLB Rule 6.06(c) to this situation, calling a strike on Bohm and forcing Quinn to return to second. Here’s the rule:

If a batter strikes at a ball and misses and swings so hard he carries the bat all the way around and, in the umpire’s judgment, unintentionally hits the catcher or the ball in back of him on the backswing, it shall be called a strike only (not interference). The ball will be dead, however, and no runner shall advance on the play.

So, technically, this was the correct call. But the spirit of the rule applies to contact that affects the catcher. At most, Bohm tapped Suzuki’s knee pad and didn’t impeded with the throw. West also made this call from first base instead of leaving it to Vic Carapazza who was two feet away.

Kruk’s outrage was probably misplaced if you’re going by the rules, but West’s application of that rule from 90-plus feet away certainly warranted some frustration.

Bohm would later walk in the at-bat, but the Phillies would strand the bases loaded and lose, 8-7.

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A group of Phillies fans is wreaking havoc for opponents from outside Citizens Bank Park

Aaron Boone wasn’t happy about them.

Obviously, Major League Baseball fans aren’t allowed into stadiums around the country to watch their favorite teams play in person.

But a group of Philadelphia Phillies die-hards have figured out a way to get around that, and they’re making a difference.

They’re apparently calling themselves the Fandemic Krew, and because of the way Citizens Bank Park is set up along with the fact that it’s pretty quiet outside the diamond, they’ve made some noise that opposing players and managers are hearing.

On Thursday, New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone actually complained to umpires about the fans who blew an air horn as his pitchers were throwing:

From the Philadelphia Inquirer:

“The environment we’re in, it’s almost like a golf environment where that sudden thing can … So I thought there was a timing element to it,” Boone said. “I didn’t necessarily think they would be able to do anything about it. I didn’t necessarily know who or where it was coming from, but it was something I at least wanted to point out.”

According to Yankees pitcher Jordan Montgomery, they had a drumline going recently:

You’ve got to give them credit. That’s innovative fandom right there.

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Four more St. Louis Cardinals members have reportedly tested positive for Coronavirus

The baseball season is in real jeopardy.

With each and every day that goes by, it’s getting harder and harder to think about a scenario where Major League Baseball’s season doesn’t come to a stop — temporarily, at the very least.

The Marlins, Phillies and Cardinals have all had members of their team or staff test positive for Coronavirus. And things just keep getting worse.

On Friday, an 18th Marlins player tested positive for the virus. On Saturday, Isan Diaz became the first Marlins player to opt out for the season because of the team’s outbreak.

The turn for the worst didn’t stop there, though. Shortly after that, news broke that three staff members and one player from the Cardinals tested positive for Coronavirus bringing the number of players with the virus to three, according to a report from The Athletic’s Mark Saxon.

The Cardinal’s game on Saturday against the Brewers was postponed shortly after.

As time continues to go by this thing is getting more and more out of control. Baseball hasn’t been able to contain the virus at all and it’s hard to pinpoint, at this point, where it spread.

For the sake and health of everyone who’s involved, hopefully they can properly trace the virus and prevent it from spreading any further.

If they can’t, baseball season will be in some real trouble.

Gators News: July 28, 2020

It has not been a great first week for the league and if things don’t shape up soon, we could very well see baseball shut back down again. 

As we wade deeper into another week the ramifications of the COVID-19 pandemic are becoming murkier and murkier as Major League Baseball battles through the first significant test of its restarted season.

The news coming out of the weekend was that multiple members of the Miami Marlins baseball squad, including both players and staff, tested positive for the novel coronavirus yet still took the field against the Philadelphia Phillies on Sunday, only to have its next two games canceled.

The good news is that so far, no member of the Phillies’ club has tested positive… yet. The bad news is that there has not been a sufficient incubation period for the virus to show up for contact over the past couple of days, making the results a bit less encouraging. Additionally, four more Marlins tested positive over the past 24 hours, bringing the grand total to 17 among Miami’s baseball personnel.

The word from the nation’s top infection disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci? This outbreak could spell doom for the MLB season, but does not necessarily mean the games must be stopped now.

“This could put it in danger. I don’t believe they need to stop, but we just need to follow this and see what happens with other teams on a day-by-day basis.”

It has not been a great first week for the league and if things don’t shape up soon, we could very well see baseball shut back down again.

Around the Swamp

It’s great to be a Florida Gator!

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What MLB’s recent COVID-19 outbreak tells us about the likelihood of a college football season

The Major League Baseball season began on Thursday and became the first of the four major sports to return to action during the COVID-19…

The Major League Baseball season began on Thursday and became the first of the four major sports to return to action during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Included among the safety protocols are an altered regional schedule which limits travel, no fans in attendance, daily testing and required masks in the clubhouse.

The beginning of the season seemed to begin without a hitch, as positive tests were few and far between and outbreaks between the teams were avoided.

Well, today that changed as the Miami Marlins reported that upwards of 40 percent of their active players returned positive tests.

The outbreak within the Marlins team and staff led to the postponement of their game tonight against the Baltimore Orioles as well as the postponement of the Philadelphia Phillies’, the Marlins’ weekend opponent, game tonight against the New York Yankees.

Here is the MLB’s statement:

Now, there are obviously a lot of question marks surrounding the MLB season and what’s to come with both the Marlins and around the rest of the league. While it isn’t necessarily directly related to the Wisconsin Badgers and the college football season, this outbreak and how it’s dealt with can tell us a lot about what is to come this fall–were a season to happen.

Here are four main takeaways:

 

1. The NBA is happening in a bubble, college football and the MLB are not. Whether this outbreak stays within the Marlins’ team and doesn’t spread to the Phillies will go far towards determining in what capacity the college football season can happen

The Big Ten Conference will hold a similar regional format, though obviously only with one game per week instead of six or seven. If a team in the Big Ten returns a large number of positive tests but it stays within that team, a quarantine would be possible and allow for the season to continue given the extra weeks of flexibility.

If it spreads to other teams, though, that is when a season cancellation would become likely.

How the MLB deals with this recent news will give college football a clear path towards what it would take to safely continue their season or cancel it all together if a situation like this arises.

 

2. The Marlins played on Sunday after three players returned positive tests–with those players obviously not taking the field. There will need to be language in college football’s safety protocol which addresses that 

As Matt Breen put well in the tweet below, the Marlins held a meeting after three tests were positive and they decided to play. The MLB did not have language in their return-to-play manual that addressed what happens with the team if a few players test positive.

College football obviously doesn’t have a singular governing body. What the Big Ten can do, though, is look at the MLB’s shortcomings and create a clear course of action if players test positive.

 

3. Lets say the season starts on time with weeks of flexibility in the case of positive tests cancelling games, the fact that the MLB, NFL and NBA are all professional leagues while college football is not creates a grey area around what happens when tests return positive

The MLB has a players union. The NFL has a players union. The NBA has a players union. And all of the athletes are paid and were–or will be–given the chance to opt out of the season without losing their job.

College football is far, far from that.

Players will have a chance to not play, but will it cost them a year of eligibility or their scholarship? How would it get dealt with if programs return positive tests and players then don’t want to play?

The lack of a union-like structure, a commissioner and the athletes getting paid for playing will create a challenging situation if players and staff test positive.

 

4. Question marks aside, watch how the MLB both handles this situation and the remainder of their season. If it gets cancelled, college football will heavily be in doubt. If they’re able to continue safely, there will be a framework towards safely playing a season

As I said in No. 1, how MLB deals with this specific situation–and whether the virus spread to the Phillies during competition–will give the Big Ten and college football a framework to work with.

But more big picture, how the MLB goes about running their season and if they are able to at all will have a profound effect on if college football can happen.

If this recent outbreak leads to a season cancellation I see a scenario where conferences follow the Ivy League and others in cancelling or postponing their fall competition.

If it is dealt with safely and the league is able to continue play, it is good news for the likelihood of football this fall.

In total, the MLB and other non-bubble leagues restarted their season knowing the inevitability of at least a few players and staff members contracting the virus. The safety protocols in place were created to limit the spread and hopefully restrict it completely.

How the next few weeks go will determine what college football will need to do in order to operate safely–or even completely determine whether the sport can happen at all.

Gators News: July 27, 2020

Welcome to another week at Gators Wire and this one has already gotten off to a wild start with the latest news from MLB’s summer season. 

Welcome to another week at Gators Wire and this one has already gotten off to a wild start with the latest news from Major League Baseball’s coronavirus-shortened season.

COVID-19 has made its first major impact on the restarted MLB schedule, with 14 members of the Miami Marlins testing positive for the virus after a weekend series with the Philadelphia Phillies, resulting in the postponement of two games tonight and possibly more moving forward.

Nonetheless, MLB appears to be hell-bent on pushing forward with its pandemic-truncated season despite what appears to be a significant chink in its coronavirus armor despite expert opinion to the contrary.

Enjoy the boys of summer while you can folks because this blimp is going down in flames. Hopefully, they put a stop to this madness before anyone gets seriously ill… or worse.

Here is the news from around the Gator Nation from his past weekend.

Around the Swamp

It’s great to be a Florida Gator!

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