FROM THE DUGOUT STEPS

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Marly Rivera
ESPN Writer

This is what David Price told me has been the difference between how the Dodgers have performed vs how the Red Sox have performed: "Their starting pitching has thrown the ball exceptionally well. We as a group haven't thrown to our capability yet. And look at Cody Bellinger, the season that he is having. They're doing stuff we did last year. One through 25 on the roster. Everybody had their hand in it. That's what the Dodgers have been doing this year and that's what we look forward to getting back to."


Marly Rivera
ESPN Writer

Here's more of what David Price told me about how the Red Sox have performed this season: "We haven't played our best brand of baseball yet. Last year, we did everything exceptionally well. Whether it was pitching, defense, hitting, situational hitting, base running. This year, we haven't synched up yet. To be where we are record-wise, especially after the way we started, I am okay with where we are at."
 

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7/15/1994
After being confiscated in the first inning of the Indians-White Sox contest at Comiskey Park, Albert Belle's bat, suspected of being corked, is placed in umpire Dave Phillips' locker for further examination. The theft of the questionable piece of lumber, taken and replaced by a burglar who gains access to the umpire's room by squirming through an overhead crawl space, a thievery Jason Grimsley confesses to five years later, is immediately discovered when pieces of ceiling tile litter the floor, and the name on the 'clean' bat now reads, Paul Sorrento.
 

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David Schoenfield
ESPN Senior Writer

Bryce Harper is hitting .410/.515/.718 with RISP and .369/.455/.694 with runners on. He's hitting .163/.306/.295 with the bases empty. Small sample size ... except the same thing happened last year: .982 OPS with RISP, 1.030 with men on and .787 with bases empty.
 

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Buster Olney
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The Nationals are 32-13 since May 24. They are 5 1/2 games behind the Braves in the NL East
 

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7/19/1924

Cardinals hurler Hi Bell goes the distance in both games of a Sportsman's Park doubleheader, beating the Braves, 6-1 and 2-1. The 27 year-old right-hander from Kentucky will be the last National League pitcher to win two complete game victories in one day.
 

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Matt Marrone
ESPN.com

The Cooperstown Brewing Company has produced Sandman Pilsner ? a special edition brew for Mariano Rivera on the occasion of the former Yankees closer's Hall of Fame induction. (We found it on Main Street at the Cooperstown Beverage Exchange.)

326c4a2ec57acf81c1f420560729cbb8_640x640.jpg
 

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Dan Mullen
ESPN.com

Just down the street from the doors of the Hall of Fame, Pete Rose is signing autographs for any fans willing to pay the $65 price for a signature.



does his bookie sign too?
 

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Buster Olney

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The best and worst run differentials:

1. Dodgers +156
2. Yankees +142
3. Twins +110
4. Astros +105
5. Athletics +96

26. Marlins -89
27. White Sox -96
28. Mariners -103
29. Orioles -189
30. Tigers -190
 

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SportsCenter

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The World's Most Valuable Sports Teams (via @Forbes)

1. @dallascowboys / $5B
2. @Yankees / $4.6B
3. @realmadrid / $4.24B
4. @FCBarcelona / $4.02B
5. @nyknicks / $4B
6. @ManUtd / $3.81B
7. @Patriots / $3.8B
8. @Lakers / $3.7B
9. @warriors / $3.5B
T10. @Giants & @Dodgers / $3.3B
 

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White Sox host 1st MLB game with foul pole-to-pole netting
By SCOTT KING, Associated Press

CHICAGO (AP) ? The Chicago White Sox have become the first team in the major leagues to extend protective netting from foul pole to foul pole, starting Monday night against the Miami Marlins.

The extra netting at Guaranteed Rate Field was in place for Chicago's first home game since the All-Star break. The White Sox announced the safety measure last month, a week after a foul ball at the park sent a woman to the hospital with her head bleeding.

On Sunday in Cleveland, another fan was hurt by a foul. Indians star Francisco Lindor said he was told his line drive put a 3-year-old boy in the hospital.

"It's a great idea," White Sox pitcher Evan Marshall said. "It's a shame it wasn't done sooner and just almost a standard across baseball, I think. Finally the players are speaking out because everybody is tired of seeing people get hit.

"It just sucks the air right out of the game and we see it happen. It's hard to move on to the next pitch or do whatever because somebody's going to the emergency room," he said.

Several fans, including a 2-year-old girl in Houston, have been injured by hard-hit fouls this season. Many players and fans have implored Major League Baseball to require pole-to-pole netting covering foul territory at every ballpark.

The new netting in Chicago will be 30 feet high above the dugouts and reach a maximum height of 45 feet down the lines.

As for ground rules, the nets will be treated like walls ? as in, a ball that bounces or is thrown into the netting remains in play.

White Sox rookie star Eloy Jimenez hit the foul last month that injured the woman.

"It's really good because now the fans are going to be more safe," he said. "Especially because line drive foul balls, most of the time they're super hard. I think it's going to be safe for the fans."

The Washington Nationals were among other teams to announce this season they would extend their netting. It was in place at Nationals Park on Monday when the game against Colorado was rained out.

Commissioner Rob Manfred recently said extending protective netting down foul lines is a ballpark-to-ballpark decision because of differing configurations. MLB mandated before the 2018 season that netting extend to the far end of each dugout.

As the crowd entered the park for the Marlins-White Sox game, there were varying views of the new netting.

A fan named Michael, who declined to provide his last name, brought his 8-year-old son. They sat two rows off the field, two sections down from the White Sox dugout on the third base side.

"Tough call, safety versus pleasure," he said. "I would take safety. Now for sure you won't get hit, before you probably had to pay more attention. But the balls were coming off pretty hard, so anyone who's just not paying would get hurt.

"There's definitely an impediment with the net," he said. "It definitely changes the experience. It's not the same as before, getting balls, seeing through the net. It's not the same, but I'm sure people will get used to it."

Maybe not, said Missi Cundari, who brought 10-year-old son Dean. They had the same seats for a game earlier this season, three sections past third base dugout, a couple rows back.

She wasn't happy.

"The view and also the ball boys would throw us balls and the players would come up and chat. This is terrible," she said. "We never felt unsafe. The balls that were hit over here were groundballs.

"Honestly, looking at this makes me dizzy. This is terrible. Luckily these seats were not expensive."

White Sox manager Rick Renteria applauded the extra netting at his home park and said he doesn't believe the nets will get in the way of the fans' enjoyment.

"I think every organization will continue to do everything they can to allow the fans to get the experience in terms of the human connection," he said. "You can still see people through the netting, it's not like a wall, a blocked off wall.

"I'm sure fans will find a way to still get items through to get signed autographs and things of that nature. You'll still be able to have physical contact if you truly want to touch somebody, it's still possible," he said.
 

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7/24/1951 "That was the finest catch I have ever seen, and the finest I ever expect to see" - Pirates GM Branch Rickey, commenting on a catch made by Willie Mays at Forbes Field

At cavernous Forbes Field, Giants' outfielder Willie Mays, unable to reach across his body to make a catch with his glove of Rocky Nelson's sinking 457-foot blast to deep center, sticks out his bare right hand and grabs the ball on a full gallop to make the incredible final out of the inning. Venerable Branch Rickey, Pittsburgh's general manager, sends a note to the New York dugout during the game to tell the 20 year-old rookie, "That was the finest catch I have ever seen, and the finest I ever expect to see."

the 'Say Hey Kid':00hour
 

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7/25/1988

The Cubs test their $5 million lighting system prior to their historic first night game at Wrigley Field scheduled for August 8th against the Phillies. Six banks of lights on 33-foot steel towers along the first-base and third-base baselines illuminate the field during the charity event in which players take batting practice and participate in a home run derby.
 

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Pirates are 2-14 post All Star break

losers of 8 straight ..

trail the Reds 10-2 bottom of the 5th..

they traded the struggling Jordan Lyles today to the Brewers

Alex McRae his replacement in the starting nod was hammered by the Reds.
 

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David Schoenfield
ESPN Senior Writer

Drew Smyly had an 8.42 ERA -- with 19 home runs in 51.1 innings -- when the Rangers released him. So of course he's been brilliant in his first two starts with the Phillies. He allowed one run in six innings in his first outing and on Tuesday became the first Phillies lefty to pitch seven-plus innings and not allow a run since Cole Hamels tossed his no-hitter in July of 2015.
 

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Alden Gonzalez
ESPN Staff Writer

Yasiel Puig has been traded to the Indians, and yet he is on the field, in the midst of a brawl with the Pirates, continually hollering into their dugout. He probably has no idea. So bizarre


CINCINNATI -- Reds reliever Amir Garrett rushed the Pirates' dugout and threw punches in the ninth inning, starting a brawl prolonged by Cincinnati outfielder Yasiel Puig, and Pittsburgh ended its longest losing streak in eight years with a rough-and-tumble 11-4 victory Tuesday night.


Reds manager David Bell faces a suspension after running onto the field to join the fracas after being ejected an inning earlier. He was put in a headlock by Pirates hitting coach Rick Eckstein, got himself out, and shouted at Pirates manager Clint Hurdle. In all, five Reds were ejected.


The latest dust-up in the rivalry was sparked when Pittsburgh's Keone Kela threw up-and-in to Derek Dietrich in the seventh. After the inning, first baseman Joey Votto walked toward the Pirates dugout and exchanged words with Kela, but plate umpire Larry Vanover got in front of Votto. In April, Dietrich admired one of his homers at PNC Park, leading to a benches-clearing clash.


The ejections started in the eighth, when Bell was tossed for arguing a strike call with Puig at bat. Reds reliever Jared Hughes was ejected in the ninth for hitting Starling Marte with his first pitch.


Garrett came on to pitch, exchanged words with the Pirates, sprinted toward the dugout and threw a couple punches to spark the brawl. Garrett was dragged to the ground by roughly half the Pirates team before backup arrived. Bell was among the first Reds to join the fray and had to be separated from Hurdle. He later helped restrain Puig, who reignited the melee with more shouting and shoving.
 

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7/31/1963
In the Indians' 9-5 victory over the Angels at Cleveland Stadium, the team hits four consecutive homers in an inning when Woodie Held, Pedro Ramos, Tito Francona, and Larry Brown all go deep in the sixth with two outs off recently acquired Paul Foytack. The former Tiger will become the first major league pitcher to allow a team to go deep in four straight at-bats in a single frame.
 

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Alden Gonzalez
ESPN Staff Writer

Cody Bellinger became the fastest Dodger to reach 100 home runs tonight. According to STATS, he is the fourth player ever with 100-plus homers and 200-plus walks in his first three seasons, joining Ralph Kiner, Eddie Mathews and Albert Pujols. "I'm blessed," he said, "and I'm gonna keep going."
 
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