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The MLB Daily Dish is a daily feature we’re running here at MLBDD that rounds up roster-impacting news, rumors, and analysis. Have feedback or have something that should be shared? Hit us up at @mlbdailydish on Twitter or @MLBDailyDish on Instagram.
- The Rays have placed Chris Archer on the IL, reports Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times. The veteran has be reporting discomfort in his left hip, leading to his 10-day IL stint. Hopefully this needed rest gives Archer time to reset. The right-hander has has a rough go thus far—in 19 1⁄3 innings he’s reordered a 4.66 ERA but with a halfway decent 25.9% strikeout rate. Fingers crossed this is all just due to his nagging hip issue, because everybody loves a comebacks story, right?
- Dodgers’ Trevor Bauer will remain on administrative leave through rest of season. The real issue that remains is that this is a paid administrative leave. The police and MLB are still working on their own investigations, and it’s very possible that Bauer could face criminal charges. Bauer has not thrown a pitcher in a major league game since June 28th of this year.
- Red Sox’s ace Chris Sale has tested positive for COVID-19. Sale is the 12th Re Sox player to test positive in the last month. He’s been sent to the COVID-19 IL for the next ten days.
- While it was known that Yankees’ reliever Zack Britton had been dealing with elbow issues that were going to require surgery, there was some optimism that he could avoid major surgery and the subsequent recovery period up until recently. Unfortunately for Britton and the Yankees, he was unable to dodge that bullet as he underwent UCL reconstructive surgery that will keep him out for the rest of this season and most of the 2022 season at least.
- Given the team’s recent run of success with very limited payroll, a lot of teams have expressed interest in the availability of Rays’ VP and GM Erik Neander to help run their own teams. Those teams were unable to pry him away and now it looks like he will be with Tampa for the foreseeable future as Neander received a promotion to president of baseball operations.
- For the first time since July 2019, a group of new members will be officially enshrined into the Baseball Hall of Fame on Wednesday afternoon. Derek Jeter, Marvin Miller, Ted Simmons, and Larry Walker, as well as award winners Nick Cafardo, Ken “Hawk” Harrelson, Dick Kaegel, Al Michaels, and David Montgomery, will be honored during the ceremony in Cooperstown, which was moved to September this year in order to more safely accommodate spectators after being postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic last summer.
- Yankees right-hander Gerrit Cole left his start Tuesday night in the fourth inning with left hamstring tightness and is questionable to make his next start. It’d be rough news for the Bronx Bombers if the AL Cy Young candidate misses more time as they try to lock down a playoff spot.
- Mets right-hander Jacob deGrom has been dealing with a partial tear in his UCL, though team president Sandy Alderson says the situation “resolved itself” and his elbow ligament is “perfectly intact.” There should be more clarity on the situation once deGrom begins to ramp up his throwing program, but it’d be a surprise if he returns before the end of the 2021 season.
- The Braves have signed right-hander Charlie Morton to a one-year, $20 million extension with a $20 million club option for 2023. In an amazing testament to the fact that Morton is getting better with age, he’ll earn the highest single-season salary of his career next year at 38 years old.
- Jonathan Loaisiga has been placed on the injured list with a strained rotator cuff. Pretty much the last thing the Yankees needed in this AL Wild Card race right now.
- Mets acting general manager Zack Scott was arrested and charged with driving while intoxicated. The team placed him on administrative leave, assigning his responsibilities to Alderson, who had already taken on a bigger-than-expected role this season following the firing of GM Jared Porter.
- Aspire to be the José Ramírez in your own life, because self love is just as important (and stylish.)
- The Giants claimed former All-Star lefty José Quintana off waivers from the Angels — a move that could be particularly important considering that starter Alex Wood tested positive for COVID-19 shortly after the transaction was announced.
- With his rehab assignment just on the horizon, Noah Syndergaard has tested positive for COVID-19. At this point, it just stings from every angle. Could we still have the ultimate comeback story? Keep crossing your fingers on that one.
- The forgotten tale of Harry Colliflower, baseball’s worst ever pitcher. So next time you proclaim this title for someone on your team, at least be a little more informed.
- The Rays have been putting on quite the show in the second half and, so far at least, have been able to hold off the surging New York Yankees in the AL East. Unfortunately, they did get some bad news as top prospect Brendan McKay was all but ruled out for the rest of the 2021 season with a flexor strain. This makes two seasons in a row that we can now chalk up as lost for McKay, as he missed 2020 with a shoulder injury.
- The remainder of Cardinals starter Jack Flaherty’s season is in question after he was placed on the injured list with shoulder tightness. Flaherty has a 3.08 ERA and a 1.03 WHIP this season but has been limited to 14 starts due to an oblique injury that cost him over two months.
- Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina announced after agreeing to a one-year, $10 million extension with St. Louis that he will retire following the 2022 season.
- Diamondbacks lefty Caleb Smith is the second pitcher to be busted under MLB’s more stringent foreign substance policy. He received a 10-game suspension Tuesday, and Arizona will have to play shorthanded in his absence.
- The San Diego Padres have struggled of late to remain in the NL West race and lately, their stranglehold on the second wild card spot has faltered in a big way. In a move that frankly seems a be desperate, the team decided to fire pitching coach Larry Rothschild with around five weeks to go in the season.
- Mets fans, look away. New York has moved Jacob deGrom to the 60-day IL. In turn, they’ve claimed Heath Hembree off of waivers. Fingers crossed on no other setbacks arising, deGrom could be back in mid-September. So everyone light your prayer candles.
- The Braves know not to let a good thing go. Atlanta has signed Travis d’Arnaud to a two-year extension with a club option for 2024. He’ll earn $16M over the next two years with the team, while his 2024 option does not include a buyout. d’Arnaud is slashing .223/.277/.369 for the year, but his skills behind the plate far exceed what he does next to it. This also buys Atlanta a little more time to prime their young, homegrown catchers, William Contreras and Shea Langeliers.
- The negotiations between MLB and the MLBPA over the new CBA seem to be being productive in the early going, as the league came to the table with a proposal regarding new parameters for salary limitations in baseball. While it would lower the luxury tax threshold to $180 million, it would also impose a $100 million salary floor, which seems like a good starting point for discussion.
- The Dodgers made news yet again, deciding to take a flyer on 37-year-old lefty Cole Hamels, who they signed to a one-year, $1 million deal. However, Hamels suffered a season-ending shoulder surgery while ramping up and won’t throw a pitch for Los Angeles this season. An interesting way to earn $1 million, for sure.
- With Yu Darvish, Dinelson Lamet, and Chris Paddack on the IL, the Padres went out and added a veteran starter (albeit one who has struggled significantly in recent years), signing recently released former Cy Young winner Jake Arrieta.
- The Giants have signed shortstop Brandon Crawford, a key figure in their wildly successful 2021 season, to a two-year, $32 million extension.
- The Angels were already having a rough time of it with Mike Trout’s return from a calf injury getting perennially pushed back, now they will be without another bat that they were counting on this season. Anthony Rendon has been dealing with a right hip impingement and will have surgery that will end of his season.
- Encouraging news for baseball fans who don’t like the major rule changes instituted over the last two seasons: Rob Manfred says that seven-inning doubleheaders and the runner-on-second rule in extra innings are unlikely to survive beyond the 2021 season, with Manfred saying those changes were instituted for the purpose of limiting time at the ballpark during the COVID-19 pandemic — something that isn’t expected to be a factor in future seasons.
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