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Tagovailoa recalls former coach Flores' comments: 'You shouldn't be here'

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Tagovailoa recalls former coach Flores' comments: 'You shouldn't be here'

Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa described a stark contrast between the styles of his current head coach Mike McDaniel and his former head coach, current Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores, on the Dan Le Batard Show on Monday.

Tagovailoa was asked about the differences between the two coaches, and Tagovailoa bluntly described Flores’ style as an abrasive one.

“Well, to put it in simplest terms, if you woke up every morning and I told you, ‘You suck at what you did, that you don’t belong doing what you do, that you shouldn’t be here, that this guy should be here, that you haven’t earned this,’” Tagovailoa said. “And then you have somebody else come in (McDaniel) and tell you, ‘Dude, you are the best fit for this, like you are accurate, you are the best whatever. You are this, you are that.’ Like how would it make you feel listening to one or the other?”

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Flores coached the Dolphins from 2019 to 2021. He was fired in January 2022 — and McDaniel was hired in February 2022 — after posting a 24-25 record in three seasons at the helm. Tagovailoa entered the league in 2020, when he threw for 1,814 yards, 11 touchdowns and five interceptions in 10 games.

Tagovailoa threw for roughly 2 1/2 times that number of yards last season, adding 29 touchdowns against 14 interceptions. He helped lead Miami to an 11-6 record.

Tagovailoa said that the coaching methods affected his confidence and over the last few years he’s felt like he regained confidence after being criticized so heavily during his time under Flores.

“Regardless of what it is, the good or the bad,” he said. “You hear it more and more, you start to actually believe that.”

“And so that’s sort of like what ended up happening. It’s basically been what two years of training that out of — not just me but, you know, a couple of the guys as well that have been here since my rookie year all the way till now.”

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The Dolphins recently signed Tagovailoa to a four-year, $212.4 million contract extension that makes him one of the NFL’s highest-paid quarterbacks.

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 (Photo: Megan Briggs / Getty Images)

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Warriors' Steve Kerr makes bold prediction at DNC, wants to tell Donald Trump 'night, night' like Steph Curry

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Warriors' Steve Kerr makes bold prediction at DNC, wants to tell Donald Trump 'night, night' like Steph Curry

Just days after his Team USA collected its fifth consecutive Olympic medal in men’s basketball, Steve Kerr was on stage at the Democratic National Convention at the United Center in Chicago, a place he called home as a former NBA player with the Bulls. 

Kerr, who endorsed Kamala Harris and Tim Walz for president and vice president before Team USA’s Olympic run, explained his reasoning for making a speech, while puffing up the Democrat duo to the crowd with Olympic metaphors. 

But Kerr got bold with his closing remark about how he sees this year’s presidential election playing out. And just like he did throughout his speech, he reverted to what happened in the Olympics with a specific player that he coaches on the Golden State Warriors: Steph Curry. 

Steve Kerr, Team USA Men’s Basketball coach and Golden State Warriors coach, speaks onstage during the first day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on August 19, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.  Delegates, politicians, and Democratic party supporters are in Chicago for the convention, concluding with current Vice President Kamala Harris accepting her party’s presidential nomination. The DNC takes place from August 19-22. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

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“I’ll be getting out every day to help people get out to vote on November 5 and elect Kamala Harris and Tim Walz as the next President and Vice President of the United States,” Kerr told the crowd. 

“After the results are tallied that night, we can, in the words of the great Steph Curry, we can tell Donald Trump, ‘Night, night!’”

Kerr is alluding to Curry’s now-signature celebration after his three-pointer late in the gold-medal game against France, which secured victory for Team USA. 

WARRIORS’ STEVE KERR ON TRUMP ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT: ‘DEMORALIZING DAY FOR OUR COUNTRY’

Curry, after drilling a stepback three-pointer with French defenders in his face, turned to the crowd and rested his head on his hands, signaling he had just put France to sleep in the game. 

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It quickly became a moment that social media made viral, with many captioning it “Night, night,” or “Nuit, nuit,” which translates to night in French. 

Kerr prefaced his bold election prediction with his reasoning for backing Harris and Walz, where he shared his belief that “this is no contest” to go against Trump.

“The reason I said yes to speaking here tonight is that, as a coach and former player, as a husband, a son, a father, even a grandfather, and as an American I believe in a certain kind of leadership,” Kerr said. “I believe that leaders must display dignity. I believe that leaders must tell the truth. I believe that leaders should be able to laugh at themselves. I believe that leaders should care for and love the people they are leading. I believe leaders must possess knowledge and expertise, but with the full awareness that none of us has all the answers. In fact, some of the best answers often come from members of the team.”

Steve Kerr looks on court

Steve Kerr Head Coach of Team USA looks on during the Men’s Group Phase – Group C match between Serbia and USA on Day 2 of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Stade Pierre Mauroy on July 28, 2024 in Lille, France. (Catherine Steenkeste/Getty Images)

“If you look for those qualities in your friends or your boss or employee, or your child’s teacher, or your mayor, shouldn’t you want those same qualities in your president? When you think about it that way, this is no contest. With Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, I see all those qualities.”

Kerr’s political stances have been known for quite some time, especially when it comes to gun control policies in the country. He was among the sporting figures who were highly critical of Trump during his presidency from 2016-2020.

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Kerr recently alluded to gun violence when discussing the assassination attempt on Trump. 

“It’s such a demoralizing day for our country, and it’s yet another example of not only our political division but also gun culture,” Kerr, whose father father was assassinated in Beirut in 1984, said at the time. “A 20-year-old with an AR-15 trying to shoot the former president. It’s hard to process everything, and it’s scary to think about where this goes because of the issues that already exist in the country. So, this is a terrible day.”

Kerr said he can already see the, “Shut up and whistle,” tweets firing off as he was speaking in Chicago, but he knows “very well that speaking about politics these days comes with risks.”

Steve Kerr speaks at podium

Steve Kerr, Team USA Men’s Basketball coach and Golden State Warriors coach, speaks onstage during the first day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on August 19, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.  Delegates, politicians, and Democratic party supporters are in Chicago for the convention, concluding with current Vice President Kamala Harris accepting her party’s presidential nomination. The DNC takes place from August 19-22. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

But he’s publicly shared his opinions in the past, and he won’t be stopping as each day moves us closer to Election Day.

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Gavin Stone reprises his early-season form, striking out 10 in Dodgers' shutout win

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Gavin Stone reprises his early-season form, striking out 10 in Dodgers' shutout win

On a day the Dodgers welcomed a host of reinforcements back to their lineup, they might have witnessed the return of Gavin Stone, as well.

In a 3-0 defeat of the Seattle Mariners on Monday night, the Dodgers fielded a (mostly) full-strength offense, getting Freddie Freeman, Max Muncy and Tommy Edman back from injuries in what was their most complete-looking lineup since early this season.

However, it was the once-slumping Stone whose reemergence looked brightest.

A rookie sensation in the first half of the season who had struggled to limit contact or induce swing-and-miss in his last seven outings (when he had a 6.12 ERA and only one outing of at least six innings), Stone rediscovered his early-season form Monday, pitching seven scoreless innings with a career-high 10 strikeouts.

“Yeah, definitely [my best start] since the All-Star break,” the 25-year-old right-hander said. “Just cleaning up some things, cleaning up the delivery.”

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Facing a Mariners offense that entered the night ranked last in the majors in both batting average and strikeouts, Stone did exactly what he was supposed to against Seattle’s light-hitting lineup.

He pounded the strike zone (first-pitch strikes to 18 of 24 batters, and on 59 of 90 pitches overall). And he dared the Mariners to hit him, giving up only two singles (and two walks) en route to his best start since a shutout of the Chicago White Sox in late June.

Max Muncy, left, celebrates with Teoscar Hernández after hitting a two-run home run in the seventh inning against the Mariners on Monday.

(Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press)

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“Getting ahead definitely was key,” said Stone, who has a 3.44 ERA in a team-high 23 starts. “They’re a team that swings a lot, so getting ahead was huge.”

The Dodgers (74-52) needed every bit of it too.

Despite fielding their healthiest lineup since opening day, in manager Dave Roberts’ estimation, the team was blanked through six innings by young Seattle starter Bryan Woo, posing few threats even with Freeman (who returned from a one-game absence with a finger fracture), Muncy (back from an oblique injury that sidelined him since May) and Edman (a key trade deadline acquisition playing his first game this year after offseason wrist surgery and a mid-summer ankle sprain).

Only in the bottom of the seventh — moments after Stone narrowly escaped his one true jam with the help of a leaping catch by Freeman at first — did the Dodgers’ bats finally come alive.

Gavin Lux opened the scoring with an opposite-field home run, continuing his second-half tear with his sixth home run since the All-Star break (he only had three prior).

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Muncy then punctuated his return with a two-run shot to right, providing the kind of bottom-of-the-order punch (he was batting seventh) the Dodgers have sorely lacked for much of the season.

“It’s been a couple months since I got a hit, so, you know, it felt good,” Muncy said with a grin after the game. “But the biggest thing to me was just getting a good result … Just getting a good swing off on a pitch that’s in the zone, that’s something that you can build off.”

For one night, it all added up to a recipe the Dodgers will need to replicate in October.

A strong starting pitching performance. Timely offense from a well-rounded lineup. And, for the eighth time in their last 11 games, a win — one that kept the Dodgers’ NL West lead to three games over the San Diego Padres and four games over the Arizona Diamondbacks (both division rivals were victorious Monday), and moved them back into a virtual tie with the Philadelphia Phillies for the best record in the National League.

“That’s kind of what we [envisioned when we] put this roster together,” Roberts said. “We finally get a chance to see it.”

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And, just as importantly, they saw glimpses of Stone’s old dominance on display once again, as well.

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Why the Pirates face an added temptation to shut down Paul Skenes

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Why the Pirates face an added temptation to shut down Paul Skenes

By Ken Rosenthal, Stephen J. Nesbitt and Zack Meisel

With playoff odds below one percent, the Pittsburgh Pirates easily could justify shutting down their electrifying ace, right-hander Paul Skenes.

This is Skenes’ first full professional season. He has thrown 125 1/3 innings between the majors and minors, nearly as many as he did a year ago between LSU and his brief debut in the Pirates’ system. By ending Skenes’ brilliant rookie campaign, team officials could cite the protection of Skenes’ long-term health and preservation of him for a potential playoff run in 2025.

They also could operate with a compelling ulterior motive — the possible prevention of Skenes from finishing first or second in the National League Rookie of the Year voting, an outcome that would deprive him of gaining a full year of service time and keep him in Pittsburgh for at least one additional season.

The Pirates currently have no such plans, according to sources briefed on their thinking. They have no set innings limit for Skenes. The only restriction they are considering, assuming Skenes stays healthy, is potentially shortening his outings. The Chicago White Sox are taking just that approach with left-hander Garrett Crochet, who is working as a starter for the first time in his professional career.

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Skenes, 22, did not make his major-league debut until May 11, but could automatically earn a full year of service under a rule adopted by the league and players’ union in the 2022 collective-bargaining agreement. The rule, designed to discourage teams from manipulating the service time of top young players, rewards the top two finishers in each league’s Rookie of the Year voting, regardless of how many days they spend in the majors.

This is how Baltimore Orioles catcher Adley Rutschman and Cleveland Guardians right-hander Tanner Bibee, runners-up for the AL rookie award in 2022 and ‘23, respectively, received full years of service even though they did not meet the typical requirement of 172 days out of a 187-day season.

The new rule effectively puts voting members of the Baseball Writers Association of America in position to deprive a low-revenue team such as the Pirates an extra year of a superstar player — a far more consequential outcome than the individual cash bonuses that are frequently tied to the awards.

For the Pirates, the difference between keeping Skenes for five more years and six would be enormous. As a club that generally operates with a bottom-five payroll, the chances of Pittsburgh signing Skenes to a lucrative extension would be extremely low. The difference for Skenes, too, could be immense. His last year of arbitration could turn into the first year of a free-agent payday, and he would become eligible for the open market after his age-27 season rather than a year later. By continuing his ascent as a generational talent, he would be in position for a historic contract.

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Skenes started the All-Star Game two months into his major-league career. He might finish first or second for NL Rookie of the Year even if he does not throw another pitch this season. But the pack chasing him is closing.


Jackson Merrill leads all rookies in hits, RBIs and fWAR. (Dustin Bradford / Getty Images)

San Diego Padres center fielder Jackson Merrill has emerged as a front-runner. Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Jackson Chourio since June 1 has an OPS of nearly .900. San Francisco Giants shortstop Tyler Fitzgerald could produce a 20-homer, 20-stolen base season in fewer than 100 games. Then there’s Chicago Cubs lefty Shota Imanaga, who trails Skenes in ERA (3.11 to 2.30) but will finish with considerably more volume, especially if the Pirates elect to aggressively manage Skenes’ innings.

Thus, the temptation for the Pirates to shut down Skenes — and effectively damage his Rookie of the Year chances — is not insignificant. A sixth consecutive losing season would sting even more if the Pirates also lost a year of club control over their young ace. Even worse for the Pirates, under another rule adopted in the 2022 CBA, the Prospect Promotion Incentive (PPI), the team would not even receive a draft pick if Skenes won Rookie of the Year.

For a team to secure the pick, it must include a consensus top-100 prospect on its Opening Day roster or promote him within the first two weeks, then benefit from the player either winning Rookie or the Year or finishing top three in the MVP or Cy Young Award voting. Three clubs have realized that incentive — the Seattle Mariners with center fielder Julio Rodríguez, the Orioles with shortstop Gunnar Henderson and the Arizona Diamondbacks with outfielder Corbin Carroll.

The stakes for this year’s candidates differ according to circumstances. Merrill could fetch the Padres a PPI pick. Fitzgerald cannot get one for the Giants or earn a full year of service. Chourio and Imanaga signed long-term deals before their debuts, rendering their clubs ineligible for PPI selections.

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The incentive, another way of discouraging clubs from engaging in service-time manipulation, was drawn up with prospects like Skenes in mind. But the Pirates called up Skenes too late for him to become eligible. They believed a slow ramp-up would be in his best interests. They also knew, at least for the possibility of securing an extra pick, it might compromise their own.


The risks for teams carrying Rodríguez, Henderson and Carroll on Opening Day rosters were relatively minimal. All three spent at least two seasons in the minors, becoming fixtures in their organizations. And, as position players, the concerns about their workloads were less pronounced than they were for pitchers.

Skenes, as something of a unicorn, complicated the equation.

The Pirates chose him with the first pick of the 2023 draft. They allowed him to throw a combined 6 2/3 innings at three minor-league levels coming off his 122 2/3 innings at LSU. They monitored his work during the offseason, some of which took place at their spring training facility in Bradenton, Fla.

Spring training 2024, however, was Skenes’ first as a professional, and the first for the Pirates’ major-league staff around him. The Pirates opted for a deliberate approach, wanting to learn more about his body, his delivery, his pitching. They also wanted to avoid building him up too quickly, knowing they almost certainly would want him in the majors during the season. With a traditional starter’s buildup, Skenes would have been on a path toward blowing past his 2023 innings total too quickly.

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So, Skenes threw all of three innings in major-league exhibitions. His rookie teammate, right-hander Jared Jones, threw 16 1/3. The Pirates knew Skenes would not be ready to carry a full starter’s workload by Opening Day. That was never their plan.

Once the first two weeks of the season passed, the potential for the Pirates to earn a draft pick if Skenes won Rookie of the Year disappeared. Skenes, though, was still in position to gain a full year of service if he finished first or second in the voting. By early May, he had a 0.99 ERA and a 43 percent strikeout rate in seven Triple-A starts. It was time.

Skenes’ major-league performance — a 2.30 ERA and 32 percent strikeout rate — vindicated the timing of his promotion. To ruin his chances of a top-two Rookie of the Year finish, the Pirates probably would have needed to keep him in the minors until at least late June. Which would have been a disservice not only to Skenes, but also to the team and the sport.

By not waiting longer, the Pirates cost themselves in another way as well. Skenes almost certainly will earn Super Two status and qualify for an extra year of arbitration. But in the end, they had little choice. Skenes was too good to hold down. And the team, to be sure, derived certain benefits, too.

Much as Rutschman did with the Orioles in 2022, Skenes elevated the franchise, improving the perception of the Pirates both among their fans and within the sport.

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Paul Skenes’ presence has energized Pirates fans since his May 11 debut. (Justin Berl / Getty Images)

Yet under the new rules, the Pirates are the baseball equivalent of “a keg tapped at both ends,” the description Ben Franklin once used for New Jersey, referring to New York in the north and Philadelphia in the south. The team will not get a draft pick for Skenes because of the care it took with him at the start of the season, and could end up with one fewer year of club control because of a vote at the end.

“I’m supportive of the rules changes that came about in the last CBA that were intended to get the best players to the major leagues,” Pirates general manager Ben Cherington said. “And of course I’m confident the league and Players Association will continue to review those going forward and work to do what is in the best interests of the game.”


Tanner Bibee can relate to Skenes’ situation. He wasn’t even in big-league camp for spring training in 2023, so he wasn’t a contender for the Guardians’ Opening Day roster. Cleveland, however, grew so desperate for starting pitching help at the end of April that it turned to him sooner than planned.

Bibee, then 24, wound up being the most productive rookie pitcher in the American League, finishing last season with a 2.98 ERA. The Guardians leaned on him and fellow rookie starters Gavin Williams and Logan Allen, but were cautious with all three, shutting down each in mid-September. With Bibee, the club cited a tweaked hip.

“Had Tanner not suffered the hip injury in September last year, he would have continued to pitch,” Guardians president of baseball operations Chris Antonetti said. “Once the hip issue crept up, we didn’t think it made sense for Tanner to try to pitch through it and risk a more significant injury. We felt the right thing for his health and longevity of his career was to shut him down at that point.”

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Bibee, though, would have preferred to pitch through the problem and attempt to strengthen his résumé in the Rookie of the Year race. Henderson was the runaway favorite to win the award, but Bibee knew he had a compelling case to finish second, ahead of Boston Red Sox first baseman Triston Casas and Texas Rangers third baseman Josh Jung.

Of that group, Bibee was the only one in the service-time predicament. Henderson, Casas and Jung had debuted the year before and started the 2023 season on their teams’ respective Opening Day rosters, so they were eligible to earn a full year of service no matter the voting results.

The setup, as the Bibee and Skenes examples demonstrate, potentially puts the player and his team at odds. Everyone benefits short-term from a pitcher’s peak performance, but the club can benefit significantly in the long run if the player fails to make headway with the voters. The 2023 Guardians fell out of postseason contention by the time they shut down their rookie pitchers, so there wasn’t much for the team to gain.

When asked last September if he was rooting against Bibee in the Rookie of the Year race, Antonetti said: “We always want our players to do as well as they possibly can.” Bibee admitted he was well aware of the stakes and suggested it would give him a chip on the shoulder if he finished outside the top two.

Not to worry. Bibee finished second and earned the full year of service time, pushing him one step closer to arbitration and to free agency for one of the league’s most financially stingy outfits.

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Righty Eury Pérez endured similar treatment in Miami last summer, when the Marlins optioned him to the minors for a month in July. He had compiled a 2.34 ERA in 14 starts, and then the Marlins sent him on a midseason vacation to manage his workload. The difference was that Pérez had thrown only 77 innings in the minors the year before. He finished seventh in the NL rookie voting — and despite the Marlins’ efforts to keep him healthy, underwent Tommy John surgery in April.

Could a player and his representatives file a grievance with the union over such an issue? One starting pitcher, granted anonymity so he could speak freely on the matter, was skeptical a player would win. The CBA does not prohibit a team’s meticulous management of a pitcher’s innings.

“Those guys are pretty good at coming up with good reasons,” said the pitcher, referring to front-office executives.

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The voting members of the BBWAA are another constituency grappling with the evolution of their responsibilities under the new rules.

Two writers from each AL or NL city vote on the MVP, Cy Young, Rookie and Manager of the Year awards. The BBWAA expressed concern to the league about Rookie of the Year votes being linked to service time, but ultimately decided the matter was not egregious when 30 voters would determine whether a player gains the full year.

Player contracts long have included bonuses tied to awards votes. The league, however, does not allow a single vote to trigger such incentives, removing the possibility that one compromised voter might do a player a favor, and possibly receive one in return.

The adjustment in the league’s policy stems from a matter in 2017 when the Chicago Cubs changed the language in right-hander Tyler Chatwood’s free-agent contract after the BBWAA lodged a complaint about an escalator clause in his three-year, $38 million deal. The clause would have awarded Chatwood an automatic $2 million salary boost if he received one vote for the NL Cy Young Award in 2018, and a $4 million raise in 2020 if he received one in both 2018 and ‘19.

An example of adjusted language in today’s contracts occurred in the five-year, $145 million extension left-hander Chris Sale signed with the Red Sox in March 2019. The deal included an option that would vest with a top-10 Cy Young Award finish, but only if Sale finished in the top 10 with more than one vote. (Sale’s current two-year, $38 million deal with the Braves replaced the final guaranteed year and option year in that deal).

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Chris Sale finished no lower than sixth in the AL Cy Young Award voting in every season from 2012-18. (John Fisher / Getty Images)

Major League Baseball is not the only professional sport in which awards votes carry financial implications. The NBA’s annual awards are determined by a panel of 99 sports writers and broadcasters. All-NBA selections and either MVP or Defensive Player of the Year awards can make players with between four and six years of experience eligible for a maximum salary starting at 30 percent of the salary cap. Under certain conditions, those same honors can earn players with between seven and nine years of experience a boost from 30 percent of the cap to 35 percent.

“The BBWAA is proud of its awards, and we’re glad that the league and players find them meaningful,” said BBWAA president Chad Jennings, who is a writer for The Athletic. “We are completely transparent with our awards votes, every single one, because we feel history and fans deserve that. Our responsibility is to assure the integrity of the awards, and we are vigilant in that mission. It’s why we work to prevent single-ballot clauses in contracts and maintain a dialogue with the players and the league when there is a concern.”

Regarding service time, Skenes represents the next pivotal vote. And his availability the rest of the season could influence how that vote turns out.

Asked Aug. 2 about the Pirates potentially lowering pitch counts or giving him more rest between starts, Skenes said, “What they’re thinking and what I’m thinking is pretty well aligned.”

Is there a hard cap on his innings?

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“I don’t know exactly what it is,” Skenes said with a shrug, “but probably.”

Later that day, Cherington said the Pirates had set no such limit for Skenes.

“Trying to nail a specific innings total, I’m certainly not smart enough for that to be anything more than arbitrary,” Cherington said. “What’s going to guide us much more is: What’s happening in games? What’s happening between games? When and if we feel — and we may — like there’s a time when this is going to help this pitcher and this team stay stronger for the totality of the next two months — by backing off a pitch count one time or giving him an extra day, whatever combination of levers it is — then we’ll do the best we can to do that.

“We’re not going to stop competing. If anybody, position player or pitcher, is in a position where there’s no clear risk to competing, well, then I’m not sure it’s up to me to play God and say he shouldn’t be competing.”

The idea of shutting down Skenes was a lot less appealing back then, when the Pirates were 2 1/2 games out of a playoff spot. The team since has lost 12 of 15 games, all but falling out of contention. Decisions loom regarding Skenes’ usage down the stretch. And the temptation for the Pirates to shut him down involves more than just his health.

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(Photo: Chris Coduto / Getty Images)

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