Sports
Dodgers place Tony Gonsolin on injured list with forearm strain
The Dodgers pitching employees has taken one other hit.
On Monday, the crew positioned Tony Gonsolin on the injured record with a proper forearm pressure, stopping the All-Star right-hander from making a scheduled begin Monday night time towards the Miami Marlins.
Proper-hander Michael Grove was recalled to start out the sport.
In line with an individual with data of the scenario who wasn’t approved to talk publicly, Gonsolin’s damage isn’t believed to be severe, and the crew expects him to have the ability to return to motion this season.
Whereas it’s unclear precisely what triggered the forearm difficulty, the expectation is that the damage was caught early and can give the pitcher sufficient time to return earlier than the playoffs begin in mid-October.
Nonetheless, any missed time this late within the yr presents uncertainty.
And with solely 5 weeks remaining within the common season, it places what had been a breakout season for Gonsolin in a extra precarious place down the stretch.
Although he months in the past set a MLB profession excessive for innings pitched this season, having tallied greater than 128, Gonsolin had appeared to be holding up health-wise previous to Monday’s announcement.
His 2.10 ERA ranked first within the Nationwide League. His 16-1 report led the majors. And after battling shoulder issues final season, he repeatedly reiterated how wholesome he had felt this season, having pitched not less than six innings in 11 of his final 17 begins.
Gonsolin’s most up-to-date outing was final Tuesday at residence towards the Milwaukee Brewers, when he gave up one run whereas throwing 77 pitches over 5 innings.
With Clayton Kershaw set to return from a again damage on both Thursday or Friday, supervisor Dave Roberts mentioned as not too long ago as Sunday the crew would use a six-man rotation for the subsequent couple weeks — one which was supposed to incorporate Gonsolin.
However now, as has occurred so many instances already to the Dodgers this season, their pitching plans are being altered once more.
Already, the crew has misplaced opening day starter Walker Buehler for the yr to Tommy John surgical procedure.
Dustin Could solely not too long ago returned from his personal Tommy John surgical procedure. Kershaw has missed two months with a few again accidents. Andrew Heaney has been out for prolonged stretches with shoulder issues.
Then there’s the bullpen, which shall be with out Daniel Hudson for the remainder of the yr with a torn ACL, and which remains to be ready to see what number of of their at present rehabilitating relievers — Blake Treinen, Tommy Kahnle, Victor González, Danny Duffy and Yency Almonte — will have the ability to contribute down the stretch.
The Dodgers will nonetheless have beginning depth in Gonsolin’s absence, with a rotation of Julio Urías, Kershaw, Could, Heaney and Tyler Anderson.
They’ve been in a position to overcome all their different blows to date, as nicely, coming into Monday with the most effective crew ERA within the majors.
Nonetheless, Gonsolin had been one among their breakout stars this yr, on observe to play a key position within the postseason.
As an alternative, he’s now turn into one other query mark with the playoffs on the horizon, his strained forearm giving the Dodgers yet one more unknown to navigate over the ultimate month of the season.
Sports
Luka Doncic press conference interrupted with lewd noises after Mavericks Game 2 win: 'I hope that’s not live'
Luka Doncic was all smiles during his postgame presser on Thursday night after the Dallas Mavericks beat the Oklahoma City Thunder to even the Western Conference semifinals series at one game a piece.
That was until he was interrupted by a lewd sound that appeared to be coming from inside the room.
Doncic, who had 29 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists to help the Mavericks beat the Thunder 119-119, was explaining what the difference in their game was when a loud moaning sound interrupted his train of thought.
Doncic stared around the room in disbelief as the sound continued.
“Okay, moving on,” one reporter quickly responded.
Doncic bowed his head and covered his face in disbelief, before saying with a laugh, “I hope that’s not live.”
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The origin of the audio was not clear. WFAA reported that the sound appeared to be coming from someone’s laptop in the media room.
The conversation eventually refocused on the Mavericks Game 2 victory. Doncic battled through a sprained right knee and a bloodied left knee after being held to 19 points in Game 1.
“I think that was one of the hardest games I’ve had to play,” Doncic said Thursday. “I’m battling out there trying to do my best to help the team win.”
The series returns to Dallas on Saturday with a 3:30 p.m. ET tip off.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Sports
Two years (and broken ribs) later, Blake Treinen returns at key time for Dodgers bullpen
The comeback was supposed to have happened months ago.
By now, the Dodgers once hoped, Blake Treinen’s return would be old news.
Entering spring training, the shoulder injuries that sidelined Treinen much of the past two years finally seemed fixed. And even at 35 years old, the veteran reliever still flashed electric stuff seemingly capable of late-game dominance.
Then, in one unfortunate, unavoidable stroke, Treinen’s patience was tested anew. After suffering two fractured ribs in a spring training game, his return to the mound was delayed all over again.
On March 9, a line-drive comebacker drilled Treinen in the right side of his rib cage. He lost his breath and crumbled in pain. Initial medical scans showed an internal bruise, with bleeding in his lung. Then doctors subsequently diagnosed the pair of rib fractures, forcing Treinen to remain on the injured list until the club’s homestand this past week.
“It was a long road,” manager Dave Roberts said, “in the sense of … feeling like you’re making some headway, and then to have to regress.”
“Just one of those weird things you can’t explain,” Treinen added of his unforeseen detour. “You can get caught up in every little frustration.”
Now, however, with Treinen back at full health and finally on the active roster, the timing of his return feels somewhat serendipitous.
At the moment the Dodgers needed him most — amid a wave of other reliever injuries to Evan Phillips (hamstring), Brusdar Graterol (shoulder), Ryan Braiser (calf), Joe Kelly (shoulder) and Connor Brogdon (plantar fasciitis) — Treinen is being thrust back into the high-leverage situations he has long enjoyed best.
“Blake could close the game out today,” Roberts quipped ahead of Treinen’s season debut last Sunday.
Close. Treinen pitched a clean eighth inning with a three-run lead that day, then repeated the task the very next evening, registering a pair of late-game holds in his first major league action since the 2022 playoffs.
“Really good,” Roberts said of Treinen, who retired all six batters he faced with a pair of strikeouts. “Anyone coming back from injury, you want to make sure you’re still able to compete at a high level, the level you expect to compete at. And he does a back-to-back. [Looked] very efficient. The stuff was teethy. He’s doing well.”
Treinen’s outlook seemed different a couple months ago, when the line drive cracked his ribs.
Up to that point, the right-hander had looked sharp in spring camp. The shoulder injuries that limited him to five appearances in 2022, and that then required surgical repairs of his labrum and rotator cuff that cost him all of 2023, were finally healed. Back at long last were his mid-90s mph fastball velocity and sweeping wipeout slider, the same pitches that keyed the former All-Star’s career resurgence with the Dodgers in 2021, when he posted a 1.99 ERA in 72 outings.
“His stuff is in a great place right now,” general manager Brandon Gomes said in March. “There are a lot of outcomes where he’s an elite pitcher, whether it’s the 2021 form or not.”
Then the comebacker threw an unexpected wrench into his recovery process — causing a new injury that took time to be accurately diagnosed.
In the days after getting hit, Treinen thought he had avoided anything serious. An X-ray and CT scan initially only showed bruising of his lung, an ailment that sounds bad but can be relatively minor. A successful bullpen session in the final days of camp kept him on track to pitch in South Korea, where Treinen accompanied the team for its international season-opening series.
“It was sore, but not painful,” Treinen said of his ribs at the time of the trip. “I was like, ‘I’m in a great place to either help in Korea or help on opening day.’”
Instead, upon arriving in Seoul, the pain in Treinen’s side only worsened.
The pitcher started to feel “locked up,” unable to get loose or throw with full intensity. He was quickly ruled out of the Korea games and scheduled for an MRI exam when the team returned home — one that ended up revealing fractures in the Nos. 5 and 6 ribs.
“It was frustrating,” Treinen said. “You don’t want to be on that roster, take a spot from somebody else. But I genuinely thought I was gonna be fine. I think we all did.”
“It’s really hard for my personality,” he added, “trying not to live that roller-coaster.”
Indeed, it was only the latest setback in Treinen’s path back to full health.
After initially getting hurt in April 2022, Treinen returned for four outings at the end of that season, including a postseason appearance in which he gave up a home run, before undergoing shoulder surgery at the end of that season.
After some early hope last season of a return in 2023, Treinen’s recovery again was pushed back to 2024, after a brief minor-league rehab stint was ended in August.
“I tried hard not to let my mind get there [with the frustration of the injuries],” said Treinen, who also faced potential free agency last winter with the Dodgers holding a club option in his contract.
“God’s got a plan, though,” Treinen added. “As you move along [through your career], you don’t ride the wave as long. You just relax and let things be as they will. If God wants me to play baseball, I’ll keep playing baseball and doors will continue to open. If I’m supposed to move on, then doors will close.”
In the end, the Dodgers kept Treinen’s door open, making the relatively easy decision to pick up his $1-million salary.
And now, they are happy to see him finally walking back through it, returning to health — and, they hope, form — at a time when their bullpen’s depth was in dire, desperate straits.
“I wasn’t really too concerned about the stuff,” Roberts said of Treinen, who along with Daniel Hudson, Alex Vesia and Michael Grove make up the back end of the Dodgers’ current bullpen orientation.
“For me, it was hoping he could trust his stuff, whatever he had, in the strike zone; betting on the stuff to play and get major league hitters out,” Roberts added. “And that’s what I’m seeing.”
Sports
WWE legend Ric Flair addresses viral restaurant confrontation, denies being drunk
Ric Flair went viral earlier this week as a video of a verbal confrontation he was in at a Gainesville, Florida, restaurant surfaced online.
The WWE legend was at Piesanos Stone Fired Pizza last week when he was “Disrespected More Than I Ever Have In My Entire Life,” per a post on X.
Flair was heard using expletives and asking a bartender to take their discussion into the parking lot.
The 75-year-old wrote on X that the incident began “Because Of An Issue I Had With The Kitchen Manager Taking Too Long In The Bathroom.”
Flair addressed the argument on the “MJ Morning Show” in Tampa.
“It just escalated, and I was wrong for getting mad, but I kind of felt like I was defending my position,” Flair said. “I was wrong for losing my temper. When I feel like I’m put in that area where I’m uncomfortable and all of a sudden everything just fell apart, I got upset.”
“I was wrong for getting upset. I probably just should have just walked out the door, but it caught me so off-guard because we were having a wonderful time,” he added. “Then all of a sudden… someone in their kitchen said I did something wrong in the bathroom and there’s no one there except me and him.”
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Flair denied being drunk, although he admitted he had Michelob Ultra and “probably” two mixed drinks.
The video begins with Flair and a bartender in an argument, and Flair saying, “I didn’t do anything wrong except spend money and put this place over and bring my family and friends here. That is bad for you.”
The bartender asked why that would be the case, to which Flair said to “watch social media tomorrow,” seemingly hinting at his future post.
The bartender told Flair his name was Nicholas, to which Flair replied, “Nicholas D—head.”
The two then discussed an interaction Flair had near the bathroom. Flair said on social media that the argument started “Because Of An Issue I Had With The Kitchen Manager Taking Too Long In The Bathroom.”
Flair then offered a female bartender a $1,000 tip “just to say to him ‘kiss my a–.’”
Nicholas said he “cut off” Flair at the bar and did not ask him to leave like Flair claimed.
Flair then asked the bartender to take the discussion to the parking lot, which he declined as he was “on the clock.” Flair then replied, “You’re on the p—- clock.” Another patron at the bar said he would take it outside, as he was not an employee, and he did not “give a s—.” That’s when a female bartender asked that man to “please stop.”
Flair posted on social media pleading to his followers to “never visit” Piesanos, although he said he had food from there delivered via Uber Eats shortly after the altercation anyway.
Flair has battled health and alcohol issues over the years.
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