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Aaron Judge hints Yankees aren’t done making moves after acquiring ‘generational talent’ Juan Soto

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Aaron Judge hints Yankees aren’t done making moves after acquiring ‘generational talent’ Juan Soto

The New York Yankees made the biggest splash of the offseason so far on Wednesday night when they acquired four-time Silver Slugger Juan Soto.

Soto has finished in the top 10 in MVP voting four times in his six MLB seasons, including sixth place last year, and he fills a hole the Yankees desperately needed.

It could be a one-year rental, as Soto is slated to hit free agency after the 2024 season, but no matter the case, Soto is one of the most talented players to set foot on a field.

San Diego Padres left fielder Juan Soto celebrates with teammates after hitting a grand slam home run against the Oakland Athletics. (Darren Yamashita-USA Today Sports)

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Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said on Thursday that if it were opening day, Aaron Judge, a Gold Glove-caliber right fielder, would be playing center, and Soto would be in right.

But even though Soto is knocking Judge over to a different position (which he does play adequately), Judge can’t wait to look over to his left and see another superstar in the outfield.

“I’m excited,” Judge said on Fox 5 New York of the Yankees acquiring Soto. “We gave up quite a few pieces to get him, but he’s a generational talent. His track record, his stats speak for themselves. I think everybody in the Yankee universe is pretty excited to have him on board… We’ll have some fun.”

Aaron Judge celebrates home run

New York’s Aaron Judge hits a home run against the Washington Nationals at Yankee Stadium on Aug. 23, 2023, in the Bronx. (Mike Stobe/Getty Images)

YANKEES ACQUIRE ALL-STAR JUAN SOTO IN BLOCKBUSTER TRADE

The Yanks sent MLB pitcher Michael King, catcher Kyle Higashioka, and three pitching prospects to the San Diego Padres, but the Yanks ranked 29th in batting average and 24th in runs scored as they were trying to plug in just about anybody in a scarce outfield.

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Now, the Yankees outfield is set, as they also acquired Alex Verdugo on Tuesday.

But the Yankees, Judge says, aren’t done yet.

“We’ve made some big moves the past couple of days and looking forward to making a couple more, but it’s gonna be a fun season, I think, for Yankee fans,” he said.

The Yankees figure to be one of the favorites for Japanese ace Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who some believe could venture a $300 million deal.

Juan Soto celebrates home run

Juan Soto of the Padres tosses his bat during the Arizona Diamondbacks game at PETCO Park on Aug. 19, 2023, in San Diego. (Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

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Soto had a down 2022 but showed his talent this past season by hitting .275 with 35 homers, 109 RBI, and a .930 OPS. He led the majors in walks last season (132) for the third time in his career. While that still isn’t his best work, his career numbers show that it should surprise nobody if he’s even better. In his career, he owns a .946 OPS while hitting .284 and has the highest on-base percentage (.421) among active players.

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Ex-MLB star reverses Trump criticism after ceasefire announced: 'I'll gladly eat my words'

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Ex-MLB star reverses Trump criticism after ceasefire announced: 'I'll gladly eat my words'

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Former Cincinnati Reds shortstop Zack Cozart backtracked on his criticism of President Donald Trump and his plan to intervene in Iran and strike the country’s nuclear facilities.

Cozart, a one-time All-Star, wrote on social media last week that he would “no longer support” the president if the U.S. was dragged into a war with Iran and Israel. However, after the president announced that a ceasefire agreement had been reached, Cozart fired off a new reaction.

Zack Cozart, #2 of the Cincinnati Reds, is congratulated by his teammates after hitting a home run during the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Great American Ball Park on Sept. 15, 2017 in Cincinnati. (Kirk Irwin/Getty Images)

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“I’ll gladly eat my words for what has transpired today… lesson learned to trust the man,” he wrote on X.

Cozart was far from the only person in the sports world to heap praise on Trump after Iran’s retaliatory attack on a U.S. base in Qatar failed to do much of anything.

Auburn Tigers men’s basketball coach Bruce Pearl wrote on social media that Trump should earn the Nobel Peace Prize.

AUBURN’S BRUCE PEARL CALLS FOR TRUMP TO GET NOBEL PEACE PRIZE AFTER ANNOUNCING ISRAEL-IRAN CEASEFIRE

Zack Cozart vs the Mets

Zack Cozart, #2 of the Cincinnati Reds, in action against the New York Mets at Citi Field on Sept. 10, 2017 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. (Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

“This is what a peace maker and the leader of the free world does, he steps in when both sides can’t agree and he gives them an offer they can’t refuse,” the college basketball coach wrote on X. “He should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. I pray that all sides can offer some grace and keep the peace.”

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Trump on Tuesday made his way to a NATO summit while the ceasefire between Iran and Israel hung in the balance. He told the two countries to quit firing missiles at each other after the deal was brokered.

“I’m not happy with Israel. You know, when I say, okay, now you have 12 hours, you don’t go out in the first hour and just drop everything you have on them. So I’m not happy with them. I’m not happy with Iran either, but I’m really unhappy if Israel is going out this morning,” Trump told reporters before he left.

Donald Trump at the White House

President Donald Trump lashes out at Israel and Iran with profanity for breaking the ceasefire. (MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

“We basically have two countries that have been fighting for so long and so hard that they don’t know what the f— they’re doing.”

Fox News’ Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report.

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Commentary: Walker Buehler struggling to rediscover his Dodgers World Series magic with Red Sox

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Commentary: Walker Buehler struggling to rediscover his Dodgers World Series magic with Red Sox

Walker Buehler owned our city. When the Dodgers ran out of arms last fall, he instantly reimagined himself as a closer and slayed the mighty New York Yankees in the final inning of the World Series. In the championship parade, he donned the jersey of fellow Fall Classic hero Orel Hershiser. He and catcher Will Smith auctioned the ball used for the final out and donated the $414,000 in proceeds toward wildfire relief.

From the day he arrived at Dodger Stadium as a rookie in 2017, Buehler exuded confidence. Tommy Lasorda had to goad Hershiser into becoming a bulldog. Buehler always had been one.

That made it shocking, frankly, to hear Buehler talk after the Angels dazed him in a five-run first inning Monday at Angel Stadium. They beat him, he beat himself, whatever.

But among the words uttered by the one-time Dodgers ace with the supreme confidence were these: “I think I can still pitch in the major leagues.”

Buehler’s earned-run average is 6.29, the highest of any American League pitcher with at least 60 innings.

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That leaves the Red Sox with this unsettling dilemma: They are a game and a half out of an American League wild card — and only a game ahead of the Angels — so can they afford to keep Buehler in their starting rotation?

“We’ll talk about it,” Boston manager Alex Cora said.

Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Walker Buehler tosses his glove and cap into the dugout as he leaves the field after giving up five runs in the first inning of a 9-5 loss to the Angels at Angel Stadium on Monday.

(Jayne Kamin-Oncea / Associated Press)

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Buehler does not shy from accountability, or from the question of whether he worries that the Red Sox might move him to the bullpen, at least for a spell.

“Yeah, I think you have to,” he said. “At some point, there are 26 guys that are going to help this team hopefully make the playoffs.

“If you’re not one of them, I don’t really think it matters what you’ve done in years past.”

In his previous start, Cora noted before the game, Buehler had failed to retire eight batters with two-strike counts.

In this game, after the Red Sox handed him a 3-0 lead, Zach Neto hit Buehler’s first pitch over the center-field fence. The Angels scored the remaining four runs with two outs. In all, the Angels scored five runs on two hits, two hit batters and four walks.

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Buehler hit the Angels’ No. 7 batter with two strikes, walked the No. 8 batter with two strikes, and walked the No. 9 batter with two strikes. Then he hit Neto to force home a run.

“It’s embarrassing,” Buehler said. “It’s just not who I want to be as a baseball player. Obviously, I’d rather get whacked around than do that.

“Somehow, this year, I’ve managed to do all the negative things you can. I’ll keep working. It’s just tough to let down our team, especially with the first inning that we had.”

The Dodgers signed Blake Snell and Roki Sasaki to replace Buehler and Jack Flaherty in their rotation. Snell and Sasaki are on the injured list. Flaherty has a 4.83 ERA and an AL-high eight losses for the team with the best record in the majors, the Detroit Tigers.

Buehler has started 13 games, more than anyone on the Red Sox except Garrett Crochet and more than anyone on the Dodgers except Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Dustin May. Buehler’s ERA in seven games since returning from an injured list stint for what the Red Sox called shoulder bursitis: 8.59.

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Cora insists that Buehler’s stuff and velocity are fine, and that mechanics and execution are the issues. Buehler walked a career-high seven in his four innings on Monday, more than he walked in 15 innings in the 2024 postseason. Opposing batters have an OPS over 1.000 against his four-seam fastball.

“Honestly, his stuff is good. It’s really good,” Cora said before the game. “The one thing we always talk about is the misses. If you look at his four-seamer, when he goes up, it’s actually a non-competitive pitch.

“If we can tighten that up — and that’s with more repetitions, of course — he’s going to be OK. Hopefully, it starts soon.”

After the game, Cora said he is “100%” sure Buehler is not pitching hurt. Buehler, asked if he is pitching through anything, said: “I don’t want to talk about it.”

Buehler is in his first full season after his second Tommy John surgery. The track record for pitchers returning to their previous performance level after a second such surgery is not encouraging. Shohei Ohtani is trying the same thing this season.

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For the Dodgers last October, after returning for an abbreviated season, Buehler threw 10 shutout innings in the league championship series and the World Series. I asked him whether the comeback might be harder over the course of a full season. That was the context for volunteering his remark about his ability to pitch in the majors.

“I think, in all honesty, it’s a lot easier to stay good than to get good,” he said. “The guys on the other side of the field from me drive nice cars, get paid a lot of money to be really good at what they do. Outside of a couple swings, I think largely I beat myself, which is just not something that you can do here.

“I think it’s in there. I think my arm still moves good. I think I can still make the ball move. I think I can still pitch in the major leagues.

“At some point, the belief, it gets hard to keep tricking yourself. At some point, I have got to put some results up there, for myself, but also for this organization.”

Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Walker Buehler sits in the dugout.

Walker Buehler sits in the dugout after being pulled in the fourth inning against the Seattle Mariners on June 17.

(John Froschauer / Associated Press)

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That is the reality, and the reason for the talk about whether the Red Sox might remove him from their rotation.

“I’m a guy open to doing whatever needs to be done,” he said.

“I’m a starting pitcher. I’ve been a starting pitcher my whole life. I don’t necessarily think that changing that is going to somehow magically fix everything.”

Something’s gotta give. Could be his results, could be his role. Whatever the case, he’ll always have last October.

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LPGA Tour's Leona Maguire deals with tick bite troubles during Women's PGA Championship

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LPGA Tour's Leona Maguire deals with tick bite troubles during Women's PGA Championship

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Irish golfer Leona Maguire battled for the lead at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship over the weekend even as she expressed her discomfort with tick bites.

Maguire said she suffered the bites at Erin Hills Golf Couse in Wisconsin during the U.S. Women’s Open and was treating the issue with doxycycline. However, Maguire showed reporters during the Women’s PGA Championship that her hand was swollen.

Leona Maguire plays her shot from the third tee during the first round of the CPKC Women’s Open golf tournament on July 25, 2024 in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.  (Sergei Belski/USA TODAY Sports)

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She described the blister as a “pepperoni,” according to Golf Week.

“It’s made my skin like tissue paper,” she told the outlet.

GOLF LEGEND ANNIKA SORENSTAM SPEAKS GLOWINGLY OF CAITLIN CLARK AFTER TEAMING UP AT PRO-AM

Leona Maguire swings

Leona Maguire hits from the fairway on the second hole during the first round of the Women’s PGA Championship golf tournament Thursday, June 19, 2025, in Frisco, Texas.  (LM Otero/AP Photo)

The Texas heat didn’t help Maguire much during the tournament. She finished the first round of the Women’s PGA Championship four strokes behind leader Jeeno Thitikul but fell off the pace.

She shot a 76 in the final round and finished tied for 19th with Nelly Korda, Miranda Wang and Youmin Hwang. Minjee Lee won the tournament.

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“Huge thanks to @KPMG and @kpmgsports for their continued commitment to elevating women’s golf and for the excellent hospitality this week,” Maguire wrote in post on her Instagram account. “@kpmgwomenspga PGA Frisco was a tough test — the wind didn’t let up, but neither did we! Nice to be back in the business end of things on a Sunday afternoon.”

Maguire has been on the LPGA Tour since 2020. This season, she’s made 14 tournament appearances and made the cut 10 times.

Leona Maguire during the 2024 US Women's Open

Leona Maguire (IRL) walks the tenth fairway during the second round of the U.S. Women’s Open golf tournament on May 31, 2024 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. (John Jones/USA TODAY Sports)

She’s earned about $315,000 so far this season.

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