November 5, 2024

Surgery for Ohtani

Shohei Ohtani required surgery for his injured left shoulder:

Before the injury, the Dodgers were hoping Ohtani could restart his throwing program earlier than usual this offseason in anticipation of him returning to a two-way role in 2025. It is unclear how this surgery, performed by Dr. Neal ElAttrache in Los Angeles, might impact the timing of that, but it was done on Ohtani’s non-throwing shoulder.

Ohtani was throwing his regularly scheduled bullpen sessions, the last step in his rehabilitation from a second major elbow surgery, leading up to the time when he was injured.

ESPN.com

He probably should not have been playing after hurting the shoulder, but he did pick up a key catchers interference call. I always thought he should be a one-way player as a batter, but if this injury hinders his swing, he might finish his career as just a pitcher.

November 5, 2024

Skipping the Dugout

The Rangers hire Skip Schumaker, but not as their manager:

It seems no team wanted to replace the current manager with Schumaker. It does set him up as a replacement for Bruce Bochy if Bochy decides to retire in the next couple of seasons.

November 5, 2024

Arnold Honored

Matt Arnold, President of Baseball Operations for the Brewers, won Executive of the Year:

Milwaukee went 93-69 and won the NL Central by 10 games after losing manager Craig Counsell to the division-rival Chicago Cubs in the offseason. The Brewers lost a three-game wild-card series to the New York Mets.

Arnold’s major moves included promoting bench coach Pat Murphy to take over for Counsell as manager and signing young outfielder Jackson Chourio to an eight-year, $82 million contract before he’d played a game in the majors. Arnold also traded 2021 NL Cy Young Award winner Corbin Burnes for left-hander DL Hall and third baseman Joey Ortiz.

ESPN.com

It really looked like a rebuilding season for Milwaukee, but Jack Jackson Chourio turneed out to be very good, and Pat Murphy made the most of his assets. I suspect Murphy will join him with a manager of the year award, although there are other very good choices there, including Dave Roberts and Carlos Mendoza.

November 4, 2024

Unlucky 13

Thirteen potential free agents received qualifying offers. This means their value will be a bit less than if they were unencumbered. I don’t think it will hurt Juan Soto all that much.

I hope the MLBPA is able to get rid of this in the next CBA. The union needs to constantly chip away at the barriers to free agency to get players paid what they are worth at the peak of their careers.

November 4, 2024

Who Checks the Checkers?

Major League Baseball is testing a check swing challenge system in the Arizona Fall League:

Teams have two check-swing challenges in the game. Per the new rules, only batters, pitchers and catchers can invoke an official review.

However, managers and catchers can still appeal a potential check swing to first or third base umpires as normal.

Should a team utilize both challenges before the ninth inning, the club will receive an additional challenge to use for the last frame. The official review will determine if the hitter’s bat crossed a 45-degree threshold from home plate.

KansasCity.com

I think it’s great, the players seem to like it, and it finally gives us a clear definition of what is and isn’t a check swing.

November 3, 2024

Royals Sign Wacha

Michael Wacha, on the verge of free agency, signed a three-year deal to stay with the Royals:

The deal will pay Wacha $18 million in 2025, $18 million in 2026 and $14 million in 2027, with an additional $4 million available in easily reachable performance bonuses, sources said. The club option is for $14 million and includes the same $4 million in incentives and a $1 million buyout.

ESPN.com

Wacha should produce about 6.8 WAR over the next three seasons. At the guaranteed money, it would be $7.5 million per WAR. Three years with the bonuses comes to $8.1 million per WAR. If Wacha meets all the bonus criteria and the Royals pick up the option, then they would be paying about $8.4 million per WAR (8.6 WAR over four years). Anyway you slice, it, the Royals received a decent home town discount.

November 3, 2024

Young Slugger

David Laurila at FanGraphs speaks with Bryce Eldridge, a young hitting prospect for the Giants. He talks about being a slugger and a complete hitter:

“Growing up, I kind of had a natural, sweet lefty swing,” he told me. “As I kept getting bigger I had to keep working at it, working with my coaches back home, working on trying to stay short. Consistency is the biggest key, especially for a guy my size. The more I can stay consistent with that stroke, the better it will be.”

And if you’re wondering, yes, he considers himself a power hitter.

“For sure,” Eldridge replied when asked if he identifies as such. “I think I’m a pretty complete hitter, although the strikeout numbers [132 this season] might point to me being a power hitter. Being able to put the ball in the air is my game. If I can get it in the air, it flies.”

FanGraphs.com

The two most interesting young sluggers in the majors right now are the juniors, Bobby Witt Jr.and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Both slugged over .500 in 2024 without striking out a ton. On top of that, they posted high BABIPs, which led to high batting averages. A high BABIP with a lot K rate and a decent number of home runs can lead to an extremely high batting average. Here is the list of players who hit at least .370 (technically, .3695) since 1941:

SeasonFirst NameLast NameABBABIPBABA to BABIP RatioHRKsHR to K Ratio
1941TedWilliams4560.3780.4061.0737271.4
1994TonyGwynn4190.3890.3941.0112190.6
1980GeorgeBrett4490.3680.3901.0624221.1
1957TedWilliams4200.3670.3881.0638430.9
1977RodCarew6160.4080.3880.9514550.3
1999LarryWalker4380.3630.3791.0437520.7
1948StanMusial6110.3540.3761.0639331.2
2000ToddHelton5800.3570.3721.0442610.7
2000NomarGarciaparra5290.3780.3720.9821500.4
2004IchiroSuzuki7040.3990.3720.938630.1
1997TonyGwynn5920.3630.3721.0217280.6
1993AndresGalarraga4700.3990.3700.9322730.3
1987TonyGwynn5890.3830.3700.977350.2
2002BarryBonds4030.3300.3701.1246471.0
.370 BA since 1941

Ted Williams in 1941 was pretty amazing.

Note that hitters with a HR to K ratio over 0.6 then raise their BA over their BABIP. Witt and Guerrero both had a ratio of 0.3 in 2024. They each may be able to add ten home runs next season, but they are going to need to pull their Ks down quite a somewhere less than 70, to get the BA boost.

Also, I didn’t realize how strikeouts really hurt Galarraga in 1993, and how a lack of home runs hurt Ichiro in 2004 and Carew in 1997. All three had BABIPs near .400, but could not pull their batting averages near or over those BABIPs.

November 3, 2024

Marcels Update

It turns out after many years I found a bug in my Marcels query, where I was using the age of the current season instead of the age of the next season. As it turns out, it makes a very tiny difference. I have updated the 2025 Musings Marcels. I have also made the fix to the Musings Marcels Opposition Batting, which are Marcels for pitchers. The 2025 Opposition Batting projections are here. Paul Skenes looks very good.

November 2, 2024

Bellinger Sticks

Cody Bellinger decided to stick with the Cubs rather than opt out of his contract.

Bellinger, 29, who had struggled after a shoulder injury with the Dodgers, had a resurgence in 2023, looking a bit more like his MVP form, as he won a Silver Slugger and finished 10th in the MVP voting.

In 2024, he took a bit of a dip but still was better than league average.

NYPost.com

The dip gives him a three-year fWAR and rWAR average of 2.3 WAR. He wasn’t going to do better than the $27.5 million he will make in 2025, so he’ll stick with the deal and see if he can up that three-year WAR.

In a bit of a down year for offense, I suspect we’ll a bunch of opt-ins.

November 2, 2024

The Charitable Donation

The Braves worked deals with pitchers Aaron Bummer and Reynaldo Lopez, but this caught my eye:

Both will donate 1% of their salary to the Atlanta Braves Foundation.

ESPN.com

How is this different than paying the players less and the Braves donating to the foundation? Does anyone know if there is come kind of tax advantage to the player or the team? It seems like this isn’t a voluntary contribution, it more like a a kick back for reworking their contracts.

I would like to be enlightened, if anyone knows for sure.

November 1, 2024

General Brothers

The Giants promoted Zack Minasian to general manager. He is the brother of Perry Minasian, the general manager of the Angels. They are the first brothers to serve as GMs at the same time:

The 41-year-old Zack Minasian had been the Giants’ vice president of professional scouting since 2022, three years after he joined San Francisco following 14 years with the Milwaukee Brewers.

During his stint in Milwaukee, Minasian was special adviser for baseball operations, director of professional scouting, manager of minor league scouting, personnel/coordinator of pro scouting and baseball operations assistant.

ESPN.com

Although they both are GMs, Perry outranks Zack. Perry is at the top of the food chain in baseball operations with the Angels, while Zack will answer to Buster Posey.

November 1, 2024

Fair Weather Fans?

TalkNats complains about fans not supporting the team enough. This may mean they can’t afford Juan Soto.

So while fans on the great social media underground society of (mostly) anonymity can blast Nats ownership, how many fans are cracking open their wallets to support their team? Exactly. There is a group of fans that will scream insults from their computer keyboards but won’t support the team at the turnstile. The Nats attendance tells a factual story that only 1.967 million showed up at Nats Park in 2024. The Phillies beat that number by well over 1 million.

While I do not believe it when people say Washington isn’t a baseball town, the issue is that Nats fans are comprised of too many bandwagon fans. They show up when the team is winning. They show up for Opening Day and events. That isn’t enough. The team and the players want a constant flow of the energy like what they felt when the Yankees were in Nationals Park in August. How do we know that? The players were commenting on the great crowds and atmosphere.

TalkNats.com

The complaint here is that the team draws 2.4 to 2.6 million when they are going good, but on 1.8 to 2.0 million when they are playing poorly. I think a lot of teams would be happy with two million fans when they are finishing in fourth or fifth place. Take, for example, the Royals who went to 2.7 million in 2015, the year after they won the pennant and the year they won the series. They came in at about 1.3 million in 2022 and 2023, and only got up to 1.6 million this season.

I’m sorry, but if fans support their team at 75 to 80% of top attendance when the team is down, that strikes me as a pretty good fan base.

The Nationals should bring Juan Soto home.

October 31, 2024

Fisher Ponies Up

Athletics owner John Fisher appears to be willing to pay a good deal of the construction costs for the new stadium in Las Vegas.

Athletics owner John Fisher and his family will invest $1 billion into the construction of a stadium in Las Vegas while U.S. Bank and Goldman Sachs will offer a $300 million loan, club executive Sandy Dean said Thursday.

Dean made his remarks to a special meeting of the Las Vegas Stadium Authority board.

He said that four letters will be presented at the Dec. 5 authority meeting asserting construction details and that financing will be in place. Final approvals are expected to be made at that meeting to allow construction of the $1.5 billion, 33,000-seat domed ballpark.

ESPN.com

That sounds like he’ll be responsible for $1.3 billion of the $1.5 billion, although we should wait for more details.

My question then becomes, why wasn’t Fisher willing to spend that money in Oakland? I suspect that at some point he decided just to get out of the city, and maybe even out of the state. California is losing population, and it must be losing it for a reason. Fisher may have decided he was better off investing his money somewhere else.

October 31, 2024

Venable Takes the Helm

The White Sox hired Will Venable to manage the team:

Venable, 42, said he is looking forward to the chance to turn around the White Sox.

“This is a great opportunity with a White Sox organization that is putting a lot of good things into place and laying a solid foundation for the future,” Venable said. “It’s exciting to be part of that process to help get back to the type of baseball White Sox fans are used to seeing. We want players who show up to work hard every day, but also smart baseball players who understand the nuances of the game. There is a rich tradition here and a fan base that deserves winning baseball, and I am excited to do whatever I can to help.”

ESPN.com

Venable will mostly likely be a successful first season manager, as it is almost impossible for the White Sox to play worse than they did in 2024. A 60 win season would be seen as a huge turnaround. Venable’s strength as a player was his speed, using it to hit 118 doubles and 39 triples in 967 games. He also stole 135 bases in 166 attempts. I would expect to see good base running under his guidance.

October 31, 2024

2025 Musings Marcels

The 2025 Musings Marcels for batters await your download. These are based on Tom Tango’s formulas, and offer a very simple, non-park adjusted look into the future. Let’s take a look at what might happen in 2025.

The Marcels project only two players with a .400+ OBP, Aaron Judge at .415 and Juan Soto at .407. Yordan Alvarez comes in at .392 and Freddie Freeman stands fourth at .380. So there is a wide spread at the top, Shohei Ohtani and Ronald Acuna Jr.tie at .377, and then another drop to .367, where players start bunching together.

Note that the only player projected to finish with a batting average over .300 is Luis Arraez at .321. Hits are disappearing, and according the the Marcels, so are.300 batting averages.

Judge tops the list of projected slugging percentages at .627, with Ohtani second at .682 Yordan Alvarez is once against third at .564 followed by Bobby Witt Jr.(.520) and Juan Soto (.518). In actual home runs, Judge leads with 45 while Ohtani comes in at 39. Free agent Pete Alonso sits four at 33, right behind Kyle Schwarber with 36. Eleven players in total reach the 30 home run mark.

Luis Arraez, Bobby Witt Jr, and Vladimir Guerrero Jr.top the hits list with 178, 169, and 160 respectively. Ezequiel Tovar, who the Beat the Streak predictors liked very much, is fifth on the list with 153 hits. Jarren Duran projects to 41 doubles and eight triples, first and second in the majors respectively. Corbin Carroll tops the triples column at 10.

Note that the top four in walks, Soto, Judge, Schwarber and Ohtani are also very high on the home runs list. Ty France will need some Ben Gay as he is projected to be hit 18 times.

As far as runs go, Carroll leads the way with 104, while Judge drives in the most with 106. Guerrero wins the negative statistic, grounding into 18 double plays.

Feel free to download and manipulate as you like. They are a great help in drafting a fantasy team.

October 31, 2024

A Piece of Childhood

Sean Kirst of the Buffalo News reports on a man rediscovering a piece of his baseball childhood:

Joe Carosi makes a point of driving along Fries Road whenever he’s nearby. He’s a retired police captain from the Town of Tonawanda, and Fries remains his standard, think-about-the-old-days route through the neighborhood where he grew up, decades ago.

He was taking that road, a few weeks ago, when he glanced toward the tiny parking lot of a little building at Fries and Sheridan Drive, now occupied by a podiatrist. At the back, on the raw cinderblock wall of a neighboring building, Carosi saw a childhood relic he had trouble believing still exists.

It was a simple box, painted more than 50 years ago in now-faded yellow paint, that neighborhood kids used for their own version of a baseball-inspired game they called “strikeout.”

Carosi, stunned, parked his car and wandered into the tiny lot. He was overwhelmed by memories of running there from his childhood home on Werkley Road, maybe three doors away, to play strikeout for hours with his buddies.

The rules were simple: If three strikes landed in that box, you were out. A home run was a blast across Fries Road. The bases – if enough friends showed up to run them – were a downspout, the sidewalk and a spot by a garage.

BuffaloNews.com

Carosi posted on Facebook and received an outpouring of memories.

I do remember one day walking onto the playground at Nathan Hale Elementary School in Bridgeport, CT, I think during the summer, and seeing a piece of graffiti on the side of the school at the back of the building. It was a White Box with an X through it. At that time, the city ran summer playground activities. There were a couple of adults there organizing games and such, but it was just a good place to hang out as well.

Tony Masone, probably in fifth grade at the time, stood next to the graffiti and proclaimed, “This is my strike zone.” Indeed, the bottom line was at his knee and the top line at his shoulders. (Strike zones were bigger back then.) The strikeout game started then and continued until the school was reduced to rubble many years later.

Masone was a couple of years ahead of me, but was probably the best athlete I knew. Every year, on the last day of school, the sixth grade would play the fifth grade in a game of softball. The sixth grade always won. A year makes a big difference in size and ability at that age. They always won except the year Masone led the fifth grade class. He went on to be a star football and baseball player at my high school. He bowled a perfect game. A quarterback and punter, he won a scholarship to Clemson to punt for their football team. While at Clemson, he asked for permission to play baseball in the spring, and wound up drafted by the Cincinnati Reds.

And it all started with a white square on the side of a school.

October 31, 2024

Who Wants Soto?

Juan Soto will listen to all offers as he heads into free agency:

“I’m really happy with the city, with the team, but at the end of the day we will see,” Soto said. “We’re going to look at every situation, every offer that we get. I don’t know what teams want to come after me, but definitely I’ll be open to listen to every single team. I don’t have any doors closed or anything like that, so we’re going to be available for all 30 teams.”

ESPN.com

I have wondered if the Nationals would open their purse to bring Soto back. They could get the value of a trade, and since they would have needed to pay him big bucks anyway, they could wait two years, save up, and land him just as the team is getting good. That would be very long term thinking on the part of Washington.

Aaron Judge heaped plenty of praise on his teammate:

“I’m proud of the year that Juan had,” teammate Aaron Judge said. “It was fun to come to work with him every single day. Even when the guy was hitting .320, I’d see him hitting late after games. If he had a oh-fer, he was showing up early doing work. Whatever he decides, whatever him and his family decide … he’s going to make the right decision for him. We were definitely lucky to have him here, and it would be great to keep playing with him because he’s definitely a special player.”

He will be seasonal age 26 in 2025. That does open a strategy for a small market GM. Why not offer Soto $300 million for three years? He would still be in his prime at the end of the contract, and if healthy would still get a huge, long-term payday. If Milwaukee, Kansas City, Detroit, Seattle, or Arizona want to go to the next level quickly, that deal might work. If he is really open to all teams, some teams will need to be creative.

I put him at about 50 WAR over the next ten seasons, which might be an underestimate. That would put him at least at $500 million non-deferred. It’s going to be a huge pay day.

October 31, 2024

Best Batter Today

It seems appropriate that one of the greatest free agents to hit the market finishes the season at the top of the Baseball Musings Batter Rankings. Juan Soto of the Yankees went one for two with a three walks for a game score of 62, tied with Teoscar Hernandez for the second highest of the day. Soto moves ahead of Shohei Ohtani who went 0 for 4 with a catcher interference. I hope Soto’s agent points to the rankings to get even more money for the prime age talent.

Ohtani drops to third place as Aaron Judge of the Yankees posts the highest game score of the day, a 75. Judge finished the game two for three with a double and a home run to go along with two walks. I suspect the game will be remembered more for his error, that started a cascade of poor fielding, leading to the Yankees blowing a five-run lead on five unearned runs.

October 31, 2024

October 31, 2024

October 31, 2024

Dodgers World Champions

In the World Series preview I wrote:

The Dodgers were at the top of the NL in turning batted balls into outs while the Yankees were in the second division. It would behoove the Yankees to put their best defensive team on the field. I thought Anthony Rizzo‘s return would help, but he looked rusty in the field. Maybe a few off days to practice will get him closer to normal.

BaseballMusings.com

It came down to the Yankees not being able to turn three balls in play in the fifth inning into outs. One of them looked like an easy play for Anthony Rizzo, but he let the ball play him, and Gerrit Cole didn’t cover first base. New York blew a 5-0 lead on five unearned runs.

Meanwhile, the Dodgers seemed to make every play. Mookie Betts was always in the right place, either running down balls that looked like hits, or holding batters to singles on what looked like doubles.

Freddie Freeman, with a bad ankle, hit four home runs. The starting pitchers did well in the first three games, helping the team get out to a 3-0 lead in the series.

All in all, it was probably the best five-game series I have seen. It was edge of your seat for most of the innings. More like this one, please.

As for the Yankees, they did win the AL Pennant. In the past, when the leagues really were separate, that was a big deal.

Congratulations to the Dodgers on an impressive World Series win, both in game five and for the series overall.

October 30, 2024

Bottom of the Ninth

The Yankees come up in the bottom of the ninth of game five of the World Series trailing the Dodgers 7-6. It’s do or die, as a win gives the Dodgers the championship. The bottom of the order, Anthony Volpe, Austin Wells, and Alex Verdugo are due up. Game three starter Walker Buehler comes on for the save.

Update: Volpe falls behind 1-2. He grounds a 2-2 pitch to third base for the first out.

Update: Wells gets ahead 2-1. He works the count full, then swings and misses for the second out.

Update: Verdugo falls behind 1-2. He swings and misses and the Dodgers win the World Series!

October 30, 2024

Nothing Left?

Luke Weaver just made a toss to first base after two disengagements in the top of the ninth. That’s a balk, and it’s another unforced error by the Yankees on defense. The Dodgers have a man on second with one out in the top of the ninth with a 7-6 lead. He then walks Enrique Hernandez and the Yankees make a pitching change.

Update: Mark Leiter Jr. comes on to pitch to Tommy Edman.

Update: Edman gets ahead 2-1. He works the count full. He strikes out swinging at a curveball that fell off the edge.

Update: Will Smith hits the first pitch and grounds out to third. The Dodgers need three outs for the win and the championship.

October 30, 2024

Judgement Day

Aaron Judge doubles with one out in the bottom of the eighth of game five of the 2024 World Series, the Dodgers leading 7-6. That’s two hits and two walks for Judge in the game on offense.

Update: Jazz Chisholm Jr.gets ahead 3-0. He takes a 3-1 pitch up and in for the walk, the Yankees have runners on first and second with one out.

Update: Giancarlo Stanton swings at the first pitch and flies out to Mookie Betts down the rightfield line.

Update: Anthony Rizzo falls behind 0-2. He swings at a 1-2 down and out of the strike zone, and the Yankees do not score in the eighth inning.

October 30, 2024

Dodgers Threat

The first two Dodgers come up in the top of the eighth inning and single off Yankees reliever Tommy Kahnle. The Yankees lead 6-5 in game 5 of the 2024 World Series in what continues to be an edge of your seat game.

Update: Will Smith comes up with men on first and second. He gets ahead 3-0 and walks on four pitches.

Update: Luke Weaver comes on to pitch for his third consecutive game.

Update: Gavin Lux gets ahead 2-1. He works the count full. He hits a sacrifice fly to centerfield to tie the game at six.

Update: Shohei Ohtani swings at the first pitch and reaches on catchers interference. The bases are loaded again.

Update: Mookie Betts hits a sacrifice fly to centerfield, and the Dodgers take a 7-6 lead. Wow.

Update: Freddie Freeman gets ahead 2-0. He strikes out swinging on a 2-2 pitch, but the Dodgers are six outs away from a World Championship!

October 30, 2024

Cole Still In

Gerrit Cole of the Yankees comes out to start the seventh inning. Amazing. He’s facing the top of the Dodgers order.

Update: Cole gets Shohei Ohtani and Mookie Betts on ground outs.

Update: Cole walks Freddie Freeman, and that’s it. He leaves with the tying run on base, the Yankees up 6-5 on the Dodgers.

Update: Clay Holmes comes on to face Teoscar Hernandez.

Update: Hernandez gets ahead 2-0, then 3-0. He walks on four pitches.

Update: Max Muncy falls behind 1-2. He works the count full. Holmes catches Muncy looking for the third out, and New York gets out of the jam.

October 30, 2024

Setting the Table

Juan Soto and Aaron Judge of the Yankees lead off the bottom of the sixth inning with walks. They did a nice job setting up the middle of the order for RBI as New York and Los Angeles are tied at five in game five of the 2024 World Series.

Jazz Chisholm Jr.grounds into a force out at second, but the go ahead run is on third with one out for Giancarlo Stanton.

Update: Stanton hits the first pitch to deep centerfield. Chisholm tags up on the play and makes second, but Soto was not racing home, and if there was an out at second, Soto might not have scored. The Yankees lead 6-5, but they are still playing sloppily.

Update: Anthony Rizzo works the count full and draws a walk, the third of the inning for the Yankees. The Dodgers make a pitching change.

Update: Blake Treinen comes in to face Anthony Volpe. Volpe gets ahead 2-1. He works the count full, then grounds out to second, and the Yankees end the sixth inning with a 6-5 lead.

October 30, 2024

October 30, 2024

Oops

Aaron Judge of the Yankees just dropped a ball in centerfield. Enrique Hernandez was on first, and Judge looked to see where he was as he went for the ball, and it ticked off his glove. That gives the Dodgers men on first and second with none out in the top of the fifth.

Volpe then makes a bad throw to third on a ground ball to the hole, and the Dodgers have the bases loaded.

Update: Gavin Lux strikes out swinging on a 1-2 pitch for the first out as Gerrit Cole tries to pick up the defense.

Update: Shohei Ohtani falls behind 1-2. He winces every time he swings hard. He swings at a pitch down and outside, and the Yankees get the second out.

Update: Mookie Betts grounds to first, but Cole does not cover first. Betts is safe and the Dodgers score their first run of the game. It looked like Rizzo could take it himself, but the ball took a little hop away at the end. No excuse for Cole, however.

Update: Freddie Freeman falls behind 1-2. He then singles to centerfield, and the Yankees lead is down to 5-3.

Update: Teoscar Hernandez falls behind 0-2. He hits a 1-2 pitch off the wall in centerfield and the Dodgers tie the game at five! The Yankees show how to give runs away. It also shows that even Cole can get knocked around the third time through the order.

Update: Max Muncy draws a walk. Dodgers on first and second.

Update: Enrique Hernandez bats for the second time in the inning. He falls behind 0-2. He grounds out to shortstop to end the inning with the score tied at five.

October 30, 2024

King Cole

Gerrit Cole has all his pitches working in game five of the 2024 World Series against the Dodgers. The Yankees starter walked two batters through four innings, but has not allowed a hit. In the top of the fourth inning, Aaron Judge robbed Freddie Freeman of an RBI double when he made a running, leaping catch and then hit the wall in centerfield. That’s the closest Los Angeles came to doing damage against Cole, and the Yankees lead 5-0 in another must-win game.

Cole has thrown just 49 pitches.