Rangers at Astros, Fri., 7:05 p.m. ET: Mike Minor and Justin Verlander meet in a battle of pitchers near the front of the AL Cy Young race.Rockies at Yankees, Sat. 1:05 p.m. ET (ESPN+): DJ LeMahieu welcomes his former team to the Bronx.White Sox at Rays, Sat. 6:10 p.m. ET: Lucas Giolito and Blake Snell square off in a clash of exciting young AL aces.Nationals at Braves, Sun. 7 p.m. ET (ESPN): Just how far back in the NL East race will the Nats be when they take on the Braves in prime time?
Eddie Matz: Si, la puerta esta abierta . But I wouldn’t call it wide open. Yes, the Nats have been as good as any team in baseball over the last eight weeks. And yes, they have a whopping 14 games remaining against the Braves. But as Wednesday’s come-from-ahead loss to the lowly Orioles proved, Washington has some serious bullpen issues (as if we didn’t already have enough proof). The good news is, GM Mike Rizzo still has time to go out and acquire a couple of doorstops — I mean, relievers.
We’re less than two weeks from the trade deadline; which teams are you watching closely on the field to see if they should buy or sell?
Matz: Every National League team that’s not currently leading its division, except the Marlins. You could make a case (and by “you,” I mean “I”) that all 11 of those teams should sell. Or that they should all buy. Among that group, no team is more intriguing (and by “intriguing,” I mean “confusing”) than the Giants. A couple weeks ago, they had S-E-L-L written all over them and were going to be to the reliever market what Kleenex is the tissue market. All of a sudden, they can’t lose and are threatening to turn the wild-card race into a berserk-card race. It’s literally keeping me up at night. (And by “literally,” I mean “figuratively.”)
Schoenfield: The Rockies and Padres have stumbled out of the gate coming out of the All-Star break — or, in the Rockies’ case, stumbled and fallen off a cliff — which, if not necessarily making them sellers, certainly makes them more unlikely to be buyers. I have a hard time believing the Indians will trade Trevor Bauer and Brad Hand when still in the thick of the wild-card race and within sight of the Twins.
That leaves two teams that will be most intriguing to watch between now and July 31. The Reds are in last place in the NL Central, but are still close and have that positive run differential that suggests they’ve underperformed (Raisel Iglesias is now 2-8 after losing Tuesday). They also have two of the most interesting players available, if they do decide to sell, in Tanner Roark and Yasiel Puig .
Then we have the Mets, who have seen their chances of making the playoffs dip below 10 percent. They need a hot two weeks just to climb back into the wild-card race. Can they trade Zack Wheeler , who is on the injured list with shoulder fatigue (but could return before the deadline)? Will they trade Noah Syndergaard ? Will they admit defeat on what looks more and more like a lost season? Best bet: Trade Wheeler, keep Syndergaard.
Pick ’em time
Two of the most exciting shortstops in baseball will be at Wrigley this weekend. Will Fernando Tatis Jr. or Javy Baez have more hits in the series?
Schoenfield: Hey, I’m the guy who told a colleague recently that Tatis’ FLOOR is Javier Baez. That’s not a knock on Baez. That’s praise for Tatis, who has produced 3.4 WAR through his first 59 games — that’s 8.6 over 150 games. And he’s 20 years old! Why are still so worried about the future of baseball with players like this? Of course, none of that has anything to do with who will get more hits in this series and the Padres’ starting pitchers have struggled of late. So Baez with more hits this weekend and Tatis in value over the next 10 years.
Here’s the latest intel we’re hearing, names to watch, reaction to completed deals and shopping lists for every team as July 31 nears.MLB trade deadline coverage
Matz: Oof. Both have been better against lefties (both teams start two southpaws this weekend). Both have been better at the applicable venue (home for Baez, away for Tatis). And both come into the series neither particularly hot nor cold. They’re basically twins. Except that Baez came into the world six years before. Which means that his legs are six years more tired. I’ll take the guy with the fresher wheels. (Tatis, in case you’re wondering.)
The Dodgers are throwing their three aces — Ryu, Kershaw and Buehler — against the low-scoring Marlins this weekend. How many runs will Miami score total in the three games?
Matz: Reverse lock alert! Despite the daunting matchup, the Fish explode … for a total of 14 runs. (Hey, that’s about three more than their average suggests.)
Schoenfield: The Marlins have been shut out 14 times already — no other team has been blanked more than nine times. What’s weird is they also have these random wild games — 19 hits and 16 runs; 18 hits; they just put up 12 runs on the Padres. They have nine games with 15-plus hits, fifth most in the majors. But they will hit the Dodgers? No, they will not. They will score six runs in three games.
Two true outcomes
Each week, we ask our panelists to choose one hitter they think will hit the most home runs and one pitcher they think will record the most strikeouts in the coming weekend. Panelists can pick a player only once for the season. We’ll keep a running tally — and invite you to play along at home.
Home run hitters
Matz: Rafael Devers
Sam Miller: Aaron Judge
Schoenfield : J.D. Martinez
MATZ: 10
MILLER: 12
SCHOENFIELD: 9
Mike Moustakas, 1
Lourdes Gurriel Jr., 1
Joey Gallo, 0
Pete Alonso, 1
Joc Pederson, 0
Luke Voit, 0
Freddie Freeman, 0
J.D. Martinez, 0
Pete Alonso, 2
Mookie Betts, 0
Freddie Freeman, 1
Ronald Acuna, 1
Christian Yelich, 1
Alex Bregman, 0
Mike Trout, 1
Mike Trout, 2
Josh Bell, 0
Cody Bellinger, 0
Marcell Ozuna, 0
Nolan Arenado, 4
Ian Desmond, 0
George Springer, 1
Cody Bellinger, 2
Marcell Ozuna, 0
Trevor Story, 1
Mike Trout, 2
Christian Yelich, 0
Nolan Arenado, 0
Joey Gallo, 0
Trevor Story, 0
Javy Baez, 1
Bryce Harper, 1
Guerrero Jr., 0
Joc Pederson, 2
Jose Altuve, 1
Eddie Rosario, 3
J.D. Martinez, 0
Tommy Pham, 0
Aaron Judge, 1
Shohei Ohtani, 0
Vlad Guerrero Jr., 0
Eugenio Suarez, 1
Strikeout pitchers
Matz: Walker Buehler
Miller: Jacob deGrom
Schoenfield: Blake Snell
MATZ: 98
MILLER: 98
SCHOENFIELD: 108
Shane Bieber, 8
Aaron Nola, 6
C. Kershaw, 9
J. Verlander, 5
Robbie Ray, 5
Max Scherzer, 14
Trevor Bauer, 5
Chris Sale, 8
Cole Hamels, 5
Jake Odorizzi, 7
Gerrit Cole, 10
Trevor Bauer, 8
Lucas Giolito, 11
Max Scherzer, 9
S. Strasburg, 6
Gerrit Cole, 4
Caleb Smith, 8
J. Verlander, 8
Caleb Smith, 1
Chris Paddack, 0
N. Syndergaard, 9
S. Strasburg, 7
Lucas Giolito, 4
Jacob deGrom, 3
Jacob deGrom, 8
N. Syndergaard, 6
Walker Buehler, 7
Carlos Carrasco, 9
Trevor Bauer, 7
Chris Sale, 10
N. Syndergaard, 5
S. Strasburg, 9
James Paxton, 8
Max Scherzer, 9
Luis Castillo, 9
Jose Berrios, 5
Blake Snell, 9
J. Verlander, 11
Gerrit Cole, 11
Matthew Boyd 10
Charlie Morton 6
Masahiro Tanaka 5
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