• The Padres’ Trade Deadline additions wasted no time making an impression. Juan Soto and Josh Bell walked in the first inning to load the bases, and Brandon Drury earned entry to Slam Diego.
• Miguel Vargas, the No. 5 prospect in the Dodgers’ organization, has one of the best hit tools in the system. He flashed that skill in a hurry, going 2-for-4 with two RBIs in his MLB debut.
• Feeding off his new teammates, Luis Castillo impressed in his Mariners debut, shutting down the Yankees and drawing comparisons to a former King of Seattle.
• One area the Mets focused on at the Trade Deadline was their designated hitter. They addressed it with two acquisitions — one of whom gave them a grand booston Wednesday.
It’s become a major part of Home Run Derby pride: The Derby Champ Chain. Introduced just three years ago, this summer saw the first player not named Pete Alonso win it, leading to instant virality as Bad Bunny placed the amazing, cartoonish crowned baseball around Juan Soto’s neck.
That it exists at all — and has become such a highly sought after trophy — is thanks to the man behind it: jewelry designer Kenny Hwang. Hwang spends most of his time making statement pieces for clients like Givenchy, Alexander McQueen, Donna Karan and Ralph Lauren, where they’re usually seen on the runway instead of the ballfield. But when MLB came to him with an idea to make something new and different for the 2019 Home Run Derby in Cleveland, well, Hwang jumped at the opportunity.
It nearly didn’t happen, though. Hwang was brought on board extremely late in the process and had to go into a crazed frenzy to get the piece finished.
Introduced alongside Josh Bell in San Diego before Wednesday’s game, Juan Soto offered something of a warning for what the Padres’ new lineup might look like: “It’s going to be really tough to go through,” he said.
Joey Gallo knew his time with the Yankees was nearing an end. What he didn’t know is that he’d be traded to the team he watched growing up in Las Vegas.