The Trade Deadline is nearly here, and with the expanded postseason, more teams than ever before can consider themselves buyers. So we tasked seven writers to pick a club and present a trade proposal that could reasonably happen.
In the first Subway Series game with both teams in first place, the Yankees got off to a fast start by hitting back-to-back homers in the first inning. But the undaunted Mets scored four in the bottom half and never looked back.
With one big swing, Julio Rodríguez put all the panic over his sore left wrist to bed in an emphatic return to the lineup, swatting a 374-foot home run in his first at-bat after missing the Mariners’ first four games of the second half.
Juan Soto — a superstar young player who could instantly turn a pennant race entirely by himself — could get traded any minute now. So we’d better rank the teams who could acquire him before he’s dealt.
In the middle of an at-bat, Albert Pujols realized the gold chain he wears around his neck had broken — so he took it off and gave it to home-plate umpire Laz Diaz, who immediately pocketed it and said something that brought a smile to Pujols’ face.
Willson Contreras took in the scene as Cubs fans gave him a standing ovation during his the last Cubs home game before the Trade Deadline. “I tried to enjoy it, enjoy it as much as I could, and take it all in,” he said.
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit his 21st home run to continue a hot streak that feels a lot like 2021 and George Springer belted a grand slam to break it open as Toronto reminded everyone just how menacing its lineup can be.
In a season full of walk-offs and comebacks, the Orioles delivered more drama with Ramon Urías’ two-run blast over the left-field wall in the eighth inning. Baltimore is now 49-48 and gaining on Tampa Bay in the AL East.
NL MVP candidate Austin Riley and Rookie of the Year contenders Michael Harris II and Spencer Strider fueled a milestone victory for Atlanta skipper Brian Snitker.
The J-Rod Show has fully arrived. Rookie Julio Rodríguez took the national stage during All-Star Week in Los Angeles, finishing runner-up in the T-Mobile Home Run Derby and providing fun mic’d up moments from the outfield. To say he succeeded would be an understatement.
If fans didn’t know before, they are aware now: Every Julio game, each moment he impacts, is worth watching.
We could write a whole story explaining why without a single stat, but the electricity he brings every day is also directly correlated to his unusual combination of tools and rare early-career production. Thus, statistical context certainly doesn’t hurt.
With a big leap, a man wearing a Yankees hat and a Mets jersey (yes, you read that right) made an unbelievable one-handed grab on the home run that put the Mets ahead to stay.
With all eyes on superstar outfielder Juan Soto amid ongoing trade talks, the Nationals will wrap up their three-game series against the Dodgers today at 3:10 p.m. ET/12:10 p.m. PT on MLB.TV.
“It’s not just the baseball stories, it’s the American story,” said CC Sabathia, one of several celebrities on hand. “This museum is a long time coming and I’m glad to be here today.”
PIT 2 @ CHC 4
MIA 2 @ CIN 1
TB 3 @ BAL 5
ATL 6 @ PHI 3
STL 3 @ TOR 10
CLE 8 @ BOS 3
SD 6 @ DET 4
NYY 3 @ NYM 6
ANA 6 @ KC 0
MIN 6 @ MIL 7
CWS 2 @ COL 1
HOU 3 @ OAK 5
SF 3 @ ARI 7
WAS 8 @ LA 3
TEX 4 @ SEA 5
Today’s Trivia Question
Who was the first player to wear No. 42 in a Mets-Yankees Subway Series game (June 16, 1997)?