Tag Archives: Cole

Future and Metro Boomin Tap J. Cole for ‘We Still Don’t Trust You’ Despite Apparent Diss – Rolling Stone

  1. Future and Metro Boomin Tap J. Cole for ‘We Still Don’t Trust You’ Despite Apparent Diss Rolling Stone
  2. Future & Metro Boomin Reveal ‘We Still Don’t Trust You’ Track List: See All 18 Song Titles Billboard
  3. Future & Metro Boomin’s New Album ‘We Still Don’t Trust You’ Is A Synthpop/R&B Marathon Longer Than ‘Cowboy Carter’: Stream Stereogum
  4. The Weeknd, Future and Metro Boomin Tease New Collab For ‘WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU’ HYPEBEAST
  5. Read All The Lyrics To Future & Metro Boomin’s New Album ‘WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU’ Genius

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AEW All In delivers as Adam Cole, MJF cap historic show with emotional main event – New York Post

  1. AEW All In delivers as Adam Cole, MJF cap historic show with emotional main event New York Post
  2. AEW All In results: Friendship wins in special MJF/Adam Cole main event Cageside Seats
  3. AEW All In results: Powell’s live review of MJF vs. Adam Cole for the AEW World Championship, Will Ospreay vs. Chris Jericho, CM Punk vs. Samoa Joe for the Real World Title, Stadium Stampede – Pro Wrestling Dot Net ProWrestling.net
  4. MJF Beats Adam Cole to Retain AEW Championship at All In 2023 at Wembley Bleacher Report
  5. AEW All In recap, review: MJF & Adam Cole overbooked main event madness Cageside Seats
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Morgan Wallen’s ‘Last Night’ No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100, Lil Durk & J. Cole, Luke Combs Hit Top 10 – Billboard

  1. Morgan Wallen’s ‘Last Night’ No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100, Lil Durk & J. Cole, Luke Combs Hit Top 10 Billboard
  2. Morgan Wallen’s New Album Has The Most Consecutive Weeks At #1 In 25 Years Stereogum
  3. With 11 Weeks at No. 1, Morgan Wallen Joins an Elite Club The New York Times
  4. Morgan Wallen’s ‘One Thing at a Time’ Clocks 11th Week at No. 1 on Billboard 200 Billboard
  5. Billboard 200 for the Week of May 27 Top 10 Albums Revealed – Jonas Brothers & YoungBoy Never Broke Again Debut, Morgan Wallen Ties Historic Record! Just Jared
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Cole Sprouse Opened Up About Being Forced Into Child Acting For A Life Of “Financial Stability” And Admitted He “Definitely” Has Some Resentment Towards His Parents – BuzzFeed News

  1. Cole Sprouse Opened Up About Being Forced Into Child Acting For A Life Of “Financial Stability” And Admitted He “Definitely” Has Some Resentment Towards His Parents BuzzFeed News
  2. Why Cole Sprouse Found Lili Reinhart Breakup ‘Really Hard’ Entertainment Tonight
  3. Former Disney child star Cole Sprouse lost his virginity at 14 while on family vacation: ‘So cringey’ Yahoo News
  4. Cole Sprouse opens up about his estranged mother; relationships with girlfriends on Alex Cooper’s Call he timesofindia.com
  5. Cole Sprouse mocked for ‘smoking’ during ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast appearance indy100
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Orioles Acquire Cole Irvin From A’s

The Orioles have acquired left-handed pitcher Cole Irvin in a trade with the Athletics, per announcements from both clubs. Right-handed pitching prospect Kyle Virbitsky will also head to Baltimore while infield prospect Darell Hernaiz is heading to the A’s.

On one hand, this move comes as a surprise, since there had been no previous indication the A’s were shopping Irvin or that they were talking to the Orioles. On the other hand, it’s not shocking to see the club continue tearing down the roster, since they’ve been aggressively committed to that path for the past year. Matt Chapman, Matt Olson, Sean Manaea and Chris Bassitt were all traded just before the 2022 campaign, while Frankie Montas was dealt midseason and Sean Murphy this winter.

With the club seemingly willing to strip the roster down to the studs, any established Oakland player is at least a speculative trade candidate. There was no real rush to move Irvin, since he still had four years of club control remaining, but he will qualify for arbitration at the end of this season and would start to make a more significant salary. It appears that they received an offer they liked enough to pull the ripcord early and jettison Irvin from the roster in yet another future-focused move.

The Orioles have been looking for rotation upgrades all winter and were reportedly still on the hunt earlier this week. They haven’t been running out huge payrolls in recent years so Irvin’s low salary and years of cheap control were surely appealing to them. They made one modest upgrade to their rotation this offseason by signing veteran Kyle Gibson to a one-year, $10MM deal but have otherwise been quiet until today. Irvin will quickly become the club’s second-most experienced starter behind Gibson.

Irvin, 29 next week, was a Phillies’ draftee and made his MLB debut with them. He made 19 appearances over 2019 and 2020 but with a bloated 6.75 ERA in that time. But his minor league results were much better and the A’s took a shot by sending cash considerations to Philadelphia to get him. The change of scenery went very well for him, as he made 62 starts over the past two seasons with a 4.11 ERA over 359 1/3 innings.

This new change of scenery will have risk for the O’s, though. Irvin has succeeded in Oakland over the past couple of years with a low-strikeout, pitch-to-contact approach. He’s only walked 5.2% of the batters he’s faced over those two campaigns, which is a very strong number. For reference, the league average for starters last year was 7.5%. But he’s only punched out hitters at a 16.8% rate for Oakland, well below last year’s 21.6% league average. His 37.6% ground ball over that span was also a bit below par. That kind of profile has worked for him in the pitcher-friendly confines of Oakland Coliseum but might not be as effective in different conditions. It’s perhaps notable that Irvin has posted a 3.44 ERA at home over the past two years but a 4.88 mark outside of Oakland.

The O’s are apparently undeterred by those splits and have added Irvin to their starting mix, where he and Gibson should take two of the spots. The rest of the rotation will be less certain, with options like Kyle Bradish, Dean Kremer, Tyler Wells, Bruce Zimmermann, Mike Baumann and Spenser Watkins on the 40-man. Each of those guys have a bit of MLB experience but inconsistent results have prevented them from truly establishing themselves as big leaguers. There’s also Grayson Rodriguez, who is considered one of the best pitching prospects in the sport but he’s yet to make his MLB debut and missed most of last year due to a lat strain. John Means could be a factor down the line but likely not until midseason due to undergoing Tommy John surgery in April of last year. It’s a group with a lot of unknowns but the club will hope to get some reliability out of Irvin and Gibson while they sort through the rest and see who separates themselves from the pack. In addition to Irvin, the O’s will add Virbitsky to their system. The 24-year-old was a 17th round draft pick in 2021. He posted a 4.63 ERA last year between Class-A and High-A, striking out 25.7% of batters faced while walking 5.5%. He’ll add some starting depth to the lower levels of their system.

By letting go of Irvin and Virbitsky, the A’s are adding an intriguing young player in Hernaiz. The 21-year-old was a fifth-round selection of the O’s in 2019. Baseball America ranked him the #25 Orioles prospect going into 2020, highlighting his athleticism but noting that the lack of power could be an issue for him. That seems to have played out in his minor league time so far. After the minors were canceled in 2020, Hernaiz spent 2021 in Class-A, hitting six home runs in 94 games. He did steal 22 bases but his .277/.333/.358 batting line was a bit below average, with his wRC+ coming in at 92. In 2022, he shot up three levels, going from Class-A to High-A and Double-A. He got into 105 games between those three levels and stole 32 bases with 12 home runs. His combined batting line of .273/.341/.438 resulted in a 112 wRC+. He’s split his time between second base, third base and shortstop and will slot into Oakland’s infield prospect mix. He struggled in his first 13 Double-A games and will likely head back to that level to start this season. He’ll be Rule 5 eligible at the end of the upcoming season.

The O’s have plenty of infield prospects, with the likes of Gunnar Henderson, Coby Mayo, Joey Ortiz, Jackson Holliday, Jordan Westburg and Connor Norby some of the exciting youngsters in the system. It seems they felt they could part with Hernaiz and still be in good shape there, whereas the A’s have continued to bolster their farm by subtracting from their major league club. Without Irvin, their rotation will consist of offseason signees Shintaro Fujinami and Drew Rucinski, incumbents Paul Blackburn and James Kaprielian, as well as a huge pile of unestablished options who will be jockeying for playing time as the season rolls along.

Jeff Passan of ESPN reported the deal before the official announcement (Twitter links).

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.



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Carlos Rodón signing: The Yankees’ rotation, led by ace Gerrit Cole, has huge upside and huge question marks

The big baseball news of Thursday night was the Yankees adding lefty Carlos Rodón to their rotation on a six-year, $162 million deal. After retaining Aaron Judge and Anthony Rizzo, the next major box to check this offseason for Brian Cashman’s front office was adding a big arm to the rotation and he got it done. 

The Yankees now have a five-man rotation with very high upside, but there are questions throughout. Let’s dive in. 

The upside: We’ve all seen it. Cole is arguably the best pitcher in baseball to have not (yet?) won a Cy Young. He’s finished second in voting twice and has four top-five finishes. He’s twice led the majors in strikeouts and led the AL with a 2.50 ERA in 2019. On any given day that he takes the ball, he’s capable of carrying his team with a dominant outing. That’s an ace, easily. 

The question: For being a dominant pitcher, why does he give up so many home runs? He led the AL with 33 homers allowed last season. He allowed a home run in all three of his playoff starts and, in fact, has given up at least one home run in his last nine playoff starts going back to 2019. The long ball problem was the main culprit in him being inconsistent last season, pitching overall to a 3.50 ERA (111 ERA+, his worst since leaving Pittsburgh by a wide margin). 

Carlos Rodón

The upside: In the last two seasons, Rodón has made 55 starts and is 27-13 with a 2.67 ERA (157 ERA+), 0.998 WHIP and 422 strikeouts against 87 unintentional walks in 310 2/3 innings. On a rate basis, he’s been one of the best, most dominant pitchers in baseball. He’s a lefty ace to stand tall alongside the righty Cole! 

Oh, and here’s a good stat: In fourseam fastball whiff rate (with 1,000 pitches minimum) last season, Cole was number 1 and Rodón was number two in all of baseball. The Yankees have the heat. 

The question: Rodón dealt with shoulder injuries in 2016 and 2021 and had Tommy John surgery in between. This means he started, by season,12, 20, 7 and 2 games, respectively, from 2017-20. In 2021, it looked like his career year, but he only managed 23 innings in five starts after Aug. 7. As noted, the shoulder injury was a concern. Even in making 31 starts last season, he averaged just 5 2/3 innings per start, adding up to 178 on the season. That was his career high. 

Can he stay on the mound all season and, if he does, will he still be full strength for the playoffs? Or will he wear down in October and falter when the Yankees need it most? 

The upside: We just saw it! Nasty Nestor was one of the breakout stars of 2022, making the All-Star team and finishing eighth in AL Cy Young voting. He’s capable of resembling an ace through the lineup twice or even three times. If he were slotted third in a playoff rotation, it would be reasonable to expect him to hold his own or even come out on top a good number of times. 

The question: Is it repeatable? 

Cortes was never highly-touted. The Yankees lost him in the Rule 5 draft to the Orioles and then the Orioles gave him back the following April. Then he was traded to the Mariners for “future considerations,” hit minor-league free agency and re-signed with the Yankees. He started 2021 in the minors. 

He was a full-time starter last year, but it was for 28 starts and 158 1/3 innings. He went through a bit of a rough patch through the middle of the season, too. It’s good that he’s only the three instead of being counted on as an ace, but there still has to be some level of concern that 2022 will end up being a fluky season for the southpaw. 

The upside: The two-time All-Star has third- and ninth-place finishes in Cy Young voting to his credit. In those two seasons, he was 33-14 with a 3.18 ERA (137 ERA+), 1.09 WHIP and 450 strikeouts in 384 2/3 innings. He flashed plenty of that upside last season, too, when he was 7-3 with a 3.18 ERA (123 ERA+), 1.00 WHIP and 112 strikeouts in 102 innings. He looked like his old self when on the mound. 

The question: Again, it’s staying on the mound. Those ace-level seasons were 2017-18. He made just three starts in 2019, zero in 2020 and appeared in four games in relief in 2021. Last year, he was out between July 13 and Sept. 21. Arm issues have hampered much of his career, including shoulder issues and then Tommy John surgery, the latter of which came with several setbacks during his rehab. Last year, it was a lat strain. 

He can be great when he pitches. He also has zero 200-inning seasons and only two more than his 102 last season, with the most recent of those being 2018. There has to be concern about getting him through the full season and then, if he does, how well he’d hold up through a potential deep playoff run. 

The upside: The fifth man of five on this list who flashes ace upside, Montas looked like a Cy Young candidate in 2019. Through 16 starts, he was 9-2 with a 2.63 ERA (164 ERA+), 1.12 WHIP and 103 strikeouts in 96 innings. In 2021, Montas finished sixth in AL Cy Young voting with a strong all-around season (3.37 ERA, 1.18 WHIP, 207 K, 187 IP, 3.6 WAR). Last year before he was traded to the Yankees, he had a 3.18 ERA with 109 strikeouts in 104 2/3 innings. 

The questions: That 2019 season mentioned above? Yeah, it stopped abruptly because he was suspended for a PED violation. He was then bad in 2020. 

In eight starts for the Yankees, after the trade, last season, he had a 6.35 ERA. It’s only been 6 2/3 innings, but he has a brutal 9.45 playoff ERA. 

At a bare minimum here, we’re dealing with inconsistency, plus a shoulder injury last season. 

When he’s good, he’s outstanding, but the track record is littered with landmines. Which version do the 2023 Yankees get for most of the season? How about when it matters most? 


In all, the Yankees have a rotation that is capable, when things are pie-in-the-sky humming, of looking like five aces. It also isn’t difficult to see stretches where they have multiple members of the rotation on the injured list while at least one other is struggling to keep runs off the board. It could be a roller coaster of a season with this group. Most roller coasters are fun, though, and there’s enough upside here to believe this will be one of the best rotations in baseball. 

The Yankees haven’t won the AL pennant since 2009 and that’s ages for this franchise. They’ve gotten to the ALCS three times in the last six seasons and all three times they were eliminated by the Houston Astros. The defending World Series champions are going to have a very strong rotation next season, but they did lose Cy Young winner Justin Verlander to free agency while the Yankees brought in someone capable of pushing for a Cy Young award. They now aim to topple their nemesis and finally get back to the World Series. They have the rotation upside to get the job done, but they’ll need to answer a lot of questions in the process. 

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Spike Protein in COVID-19 Vaccines Triggering Cancers and Clots: Pathologist Dr. Ryan Cole

Pathologist Dr. Ryan Cole has observed alarming health trends since the rollout of the COVID-19 vaccines, including unusual cancers, other immune system diseases, heart damage, and deaths. Cole said the vaccines are formulated for a strain of the virus that is extinct, but the spike protein in the injections is from the original Wuhan strain and is causing these health problems.

“Now we know the vaccine is more dangerous than the virus itself, because the vaccine still has all those pro-clotting abilities, has all those inflammatory abilities, whereas the spike from Omicron does not,” Cole told EpochTV’s “American Thought Leaders” program during a recent interview.

At the outset, COVID-19 was a clotting disease, said Cole, but with the Omicron variant, the risk for clotting has decreased.

“The vaccinal spike is still the original Wuhan spike. That’s the clotting spike. The Omicron spike is not the clotting spike,” he said. “That spike protein, plain and simple, is pathophysiologically toxic to the human body.”

Cole has continued to observe higher rates of uncommon cancers in unusual age groups, as well as reactivation of viruses that cause illnesses such as Epstein-Barr and shingles, much of which is being confirmed by statistical data in the United States and other countries.

“I was in Kentucky last weekend. [An] interventional radiologist came up to me. He said, ‘You wouldn’t believe how many young women I’m seeing with breast cancer, stage 4, aggressive.’ I said I would believe it.”

Cole said he gets calls daily from doctors around the world who tell him they are shocked by the uptick in disease they’re seeing, and getting an appointment with any oncologist is near impossible because of the backlog, he said.

A poll commissioned by Children’s Health Defense shows that 15 percent of people polled had a new medical condition after their vaccination for COVID-19, Cole said, and he believes one of the reasons that percentage is not higher is because many people received weakened mRNA doses that had degraded due to time and temperature.

Clots removed from vaccinated patients are shown. (Courtesy of Dr. Ryan Cole)

Blood Clots

The spike protein from the original virus that’s still in many of the vaccines induces “thrombogenic clots,” Cole said.

Cole said there are receptors all throughout the human body, including on blood platelets and endothelial blood cell linings.

“Once that spike binds, it just starts this whole little cascade, this little waterfall,” he said, adding that the chemical binds with various receptors and creates blood clots.

Cole has seen these clots not just postmortem but in living patients, which are white and rubbery, whereas clots after death are “red and jelly-like,” he said.

In addition, Cole has seen that the vaccines suppress interferon, which “is a very important chemical that your cells make to recruit cells to react to either infections or cancer.”

High enough doses of Ivermectin can help those suffering from these types of clots, Cole said.

Compromised Immune System

These negative health trends are related to the immune system being compromised and the body not being able to fight off infections. The immune cells that are meant to immediately respond to threats in the body stop performing their proper functions, he said.

“Now you have a perfect storm of the ability for other infections to infect the human body,” he said. “That immediate response is not as robust as it’s supposed to be in the majority of people that received the shot.”

Cole said it’s not clear how long these individuals will be in an immune-suppressed state.

“It seems to be a dose accumulated effect,” he said. “The spike is dose-dependent toxicity. The more spike you get, the longer your body keeps making it, and the more adversely many systems are affected.”

There are studies suggesting that the Pfizer vaccine diminishes the body’s immediate immune response, Cole said. He mentioned one study by Dutch researcher F. Konstantin Föhse, which concluded that the mRNA in the Pfizer/BioNtech COVID-19 vaccine “induces complex functional reprogramming of innate immune responses, which should be considered in the development and use of this new class of vaccines.”

The Epoch Times reached out to Pfizer for comment.

People who have not received the COVID-19 vaccines “have a broad nonspecific response to any infection,” said Cole, and they can fight off the infection in about 10 days. But for those who have gotten the injections, the spike protein stays in the system much longer and acts as a toxin.

“Just minute levels can still trigger all these immune systems harms,” he added.

Katharina Röltgen’s study out of Stanford University found that the spike protein stays in the system for at least 60 days, said Cole.

Spike protein illustration. (Shutterstock)

Cardiac Damage

“We know that the spike protein gets into the heart tissues, that spike protein will induce all those other inflammatory cells to come in and now swell the heart,” Cole said.

He said he’s examined tissues of triathletes that died while swimming. These were athletes at their peak performance, he said, only one or two weeks after receiving their second dose of the vaccine, and the autopsy from the medial examiner’s office showed cardiomegaly, or an enlarged heart.

Cole encourages all his colleagues to look for spike protein in these sudden adult death cases to find the potential connection to the spike protein from the COVID-19 injections.

There also appears to be a correlation between the time period when younger people started getting the vaccines and incidences of heart damage and death among this cohort, said Cole.

“The spike itself doesn’t destroy the tissue,” he said. “The spike lands, and then it triggers an inflammatory reaction. The body wants to react to it, so then all those inflammatory cells release cytokines and chemicals that will end up munching away those tissues.”

Some in the mainstream medical establishment have said the myocarditis, or heart inflammation, caused by vaccines is mild and that people shouldn’t be concerned. But Cole said “there’s no such thing as mild myocarditis,” and that these cases have long-term consequences.

There is some evidence that suggests these vaccines can cause death.

Edward Dowd, a former portfolio manager for BlackRock, has been tracking excess deaths in working-age adults using insurance company data. Many countries’ statistics show excess deaths compared to prior years, with many having 30 to 50 percent higher rates of death in young or working-age people, said Cole.

“The call to action is every coroner, every medical examiner needs to request a spike and nucleocapsid stain on every organ in the body of every young deceased person,” he said.

Experimental

The vaccines continue to be used under emergency use authorization, so the companies and agencies are protected from liability, Cole said.

“They can harm the hearts of children, they can kill children with their spike protein, but they have no repercussions,” said Cole. “That’s why we’re not giving children an approved product, because it would be pulled off the market posthaste.”

The boosters and the bivalent COVID-19 shots are still harmful because they have the original Wuhan spike in them, said Cole.

“It’s all risk, in terms of those harms we’ve listed, with no advantage,” he said. “It gives a small window of protection, supposedly.”

Every time someone gets a booster shot, their immune system becomes more damaged, he said.

Cole does not recommend the outdated shots for COVID-19. Instead, he suggests early treatment for someone who becomes ill from a COVID-19 variant.

A medic prepares a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in Netanya, Israel, on Jan. 5, 2022. (Jack Guez/AFP via Getty Images)

Maligned for Following the Data

Even though there have been no patient complaints filed against him, Cole said one of the major insurance companies stopped working with him, and his medical practice has suffered. He has six children, four of whom are in college, which has been financially challenging, he said.

He has been maligned by the mainstream media and medical establishment.

“I’ve invited anyone and everyone in the world, if you disagree with me, bring better data,” he said. But the response has been silence.

“I’m always willing to be wrong,” he said. “That’s science. Science is asking the question and testing the hypothesis and saying, ‘Huh, we could be right or wrong, but let’s prove it.’”

Cole said his only reason for talking about these harms is to uphold the oath he took to do no harm to his patients.

“I have no narrative other than ‘Here is the science and data.’ That’s my job,” he said. “I come to the scene of the accident as the pathologist and report what’s at the scene of the accident. The cancer, the cells, the tumor.”

Real Science

Real science should not have an agenda and needs to be unbiased, so it can’t be done by the big scientific journals because they’re corrupted by money from Big Pharma, said Cole, adding that institutions like the National Institutes of Health (NIH) control much of the research funding.

Cole said he thinks fear of repercussion and reprisal are keeping more universities and researchers from studying the effects of the COVID-19 vaccines.

The Epoch Times reached out to the NIH for comment.

All doctors take the Hippocratic Oath, which requires them to promise to do no harm to their patients, said Cole, but doctors should also consider the harm of omission by not thoroughly studying the vaccines.

“I think we have a societal apology, as a medical profession, that is owed to humanity for not doing all of these things earlier on in this pandemic. Not only early treatment, but these studies that have been widely available but not funded,” said Cole.

A small group of scientists has organized themselves to ask questions about the safety and efficacy of the COVID-19 treatments, but many more have not, said Cole.

“It’s time for integrity and science to happen again. It’s time for my colleagues in those large ivory towers, it’s time for the scientists in those federal agencies, to step up and say, ‘OK, we messed up, but we’ll do science going forward.”

Many pathologists are talking about these issues privately but not publicly for fear of being maligned and losing their careers, he said.

“I think the challenge is, a lot of them in the university settings have large grants. They know if they speak out against the NIH’s narrative, they won’t get funding,” Cole said. “I think some of the private groups fear for what I experienced, and that’s a cancellation by their medical community and their insurance companies if they speak out against the narrative.”

“If it’s inconvenient to what you want to tell yourself, that’s fine,” he said. “But the cells don’t lie. The clots don’t lie. The damaged organs don’t lie.”

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Jan Jekielek is a senior editor with The Epoch Times and host of the show, “American Thought Leaders.” Jan’s career has spanned academia, media, and international human rights work. In 2009 he joined The Epoch Times full time and has served in a variety of roles, including as website chief editor. He is the producer of the award-winning Holocaust documentary film “Finding Manny.”

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Masooma Haq began reporting for The Epoch Times from Pakistan in 2008. She currently covers a variety of topics including U.S. government, culture, and entertainment.

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Yankees vs. Guardians score: Gerrit Cole, Harrison Bader help keep New York’s season alive, force ALDS Game 5

The New York Yankees won ALDS Game 4 on the road against the Cleveland Guardians on Sunday night to tie the series at 2-2 and force a decisive game in the best-of-five series. Gerrit Cole and Harrison Bader helped save New York’s season in a 4-2 victory. The Yankees took an early lead and never trailed, but there was some drama into the late innings. 

Let’s take a look at how it all went down. 

Yankees strike early, Bader goes deep again

The Yankees got on the board before the Guardians even had a chance to hit. Gleyber Torres led off the game with a single, stole second base and then scored on an Anthony Rizzo single. 

They didn’t wait long to add more, as center fielder Harrison Bader hit a two-run shot in the second inning to give the Yankees a 3-0 lead. Here’s the blast: 

It was a no-doubter at 429 feet and the third home run for Bader in the series. He hit zero in 14 regular-season games for the Yankees, and before his injury and trade, he hit five in 72 games for the Cardinals. This is only the third time in Yankees history a center fielder has homered three times in an entire postseason, joining Mickey Mantle and Bernie Williams, according to ESPN Stats and Info. 

Cole looked like an ace

That’s why they pay him the big bucks, right? The Yankees were facing elimination and needed a big outing from their ace coming off a gut punch of a loss in Game 3. Cole went out and worked seven strong innings. The Guardians were able to scratch a run across the plate in the third inning on a José Ramírez blooper that had no business being a hit. 

There was one booming run given up by Cole: A Josh Naylor homer in the fourth inning. Naylor was very excited rounding the bases while calling Cole his “son.” 

Hey, whatever gets you going, right? That’s the eighth straight playoff game Cole has allowed a homer, tying Yu Darvish for the MLB record (via Katie Sharp). 

Cole locked it in after that. He responded by retiring the next 10 batters he faced and 12 of his final 13. 

The line: 7 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, BB, 8 K. He threw 110 pitches, so anyone thinking of him coming out of the bullpen in Game 5 can keep dreaming. Regardless, that was a big outing for the Yankees when they needed it most. In fact, it could be argued this was the biggest outing of Cole’s Yankees career, given the circumstances.

Also, for fans of starting pitchers going deep into games (I’m raising my hand!), Cole going seven here was the eighth time so far this postseason that a starter has gone at least seven innings. There were only four such starts for the entirety of the playoffs last year (via Sarah Langs). This is a positive trend for the game as a whole, it says here. 

Yankees give Guardians a taste of their own medicine

The Guardians’ ways of putting the ball in play to make things happen really went their way in Game 3. They found a bunch of holes, sometimes on balls not hit very hard. Their first run in Game 4 was similar. 

This time around, in the top of the sixth, the Yankees gathered some insurance in similar fashion. Aaron Judge reached on a ground-ball infield single before Anthony Rizzo softly doubled down the left-field line. Then Giancarlo Stanton drove home Judge with a sacrifice fly. 

It’s much more efficient to just club homers, but any which way works. All the runs count the same. 

Holmes, Peralta shut the door

With the late-inning rallies we’ve seen from the Guardians all season, not to mention the Yankees’ bullpen woes late in the year, a two-run lead was pretty tenuous heading to the eighth. Much was made about Clay Holmes not pitching in Game 3. He got the eighth inning in this one. He walked Steven Kwan with one out, bringing the tying run to the plate, but Holmes struck out Amed Rosario and then Ramírez to end the threat. 

In the ninth, the Yankees went with Wandy Peralta. He had already thrown in every game this series, making the Game 4 outing his third consecutive day on the hill. He went 27 pitches in Game 3, too. No matter. He closed things down with two weak grounders and a strikeout. 

Peralta only threw seven pitches in this one, but Game 5 would be his fourth straight day pitching. It’s possible he’ll be compromised. Yankees manager Aaron Boone has indicated he wouldn’t use Holmes on back-to-back days, so it’s possible he’s out for Game 5 or at least not as sharp as he was in Game 4. 

Everyone else is available. 

Guardians best relievers are fresh

With a big tip of the hat to Cody Morris for his two scoreless innings and nods toward Zach Plesac (one scoreless inning) and Eli Morgan (one run allowed in one inning), the Guardians’ bullpen is in excellent shape heading to Game 5. 

  • Sam Hentges didn’t pitch in Game 4 after going 31 pitches in Game 3. 
  • Trevor Stephan hasn’t pitched since Game 2. 
  • Primary setup man James Karinchak hasn’t pitched since Game 2, meaning all three setup men are fresh and ready to go in possibly extended duty in Game 5. 
  • Emmanuel Clase is the best closer left in the playoffs. He also hasn’t pitched since Game 2. In that game, he went 2 1/3 innings, providing a nice illustration that he’s fine getting a lot more than just three outs. 

Expect Terry Francona to lean heavily on those four pitchers in Game 5 with the season on the line. 

Next up

We’ll do it again Monday, only the series shifts back to Yankee Stadium for a 7:07 p.m. ET start. There was only one Wild Card Series to go the distance and it was played in New York and this series represents the only divisional series to go the distance. It’s win or go home for both teams. 

As such, the pitching situation is basically “all hands on deck.” The starters are set to be Aaron Civale for the Guardians and Jameson Taillon for the Yankees. 

Civale (5-6, 4.92) hasn’t pitched in game action since Oct. 5, but he did close the season well (3.27 ERA in his last four starts). Taillon (14-5, 3.91) was the losing pitcher in Game 2, as he coughed up two runs on three hits without recording an out in the 10th inning. 

Still, it’s unlikely either team is planning on the starters to go very deep unless they are totally dominant — especially the Guardians with those late studs fresh. 

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Yankees vs. Guardians score, takeaways: New York takes ALDS Game 1 behind Gerrit Cole, Anthony Rizzo

NEW YORK — Yankee Stadium was full of firsts Tuesday night. It was the first postseason game in the Bronx since Game 5 of the 2019 ALCS. It was Gerrit Cole’s first home postseason start as a Yankee. Two players hit their first career postseason home runs. And the New York Yankees won the first game of their ALDS matchup with the Cleveland Guardians (NYY 4, CLE 1).

Cole pitched around early trouble to give the Yankees 6 1/3 innings of one-run ball while striking out eight against the team with the lowest regular season strikeout rate in baseball. Anthony Rizzo put the game to bed with a two-run home run into the second deck in right field in the sixth inning. New York is now two wins away from advancing to the ALCS.

Here are takeaways from Game 1 between the Yankees and Guardians.

Cole navigates early danger

The Guardians certainly made Cole work in the early innings. They got a man to second base in the first and second innings, but Cole escaped with strikeouts, then some nifty defense helped him navigate a bases loaded, one-out jam in the third. Most notably, Josh Donaldson ranged to his left to scoop a ground, and threw home for the force out.

Following that out at home, Cole settled in and retired 12 of the final 14 batters he faced, and Cleveland did not have another runner advance as far as second base while he was on the mound. His only blemish was a Steven Kwan solo homer — it was Kwan’s first career postseason homer and only his seventh homer of 2022 — and in three starts this season, Cole held the Guardians to three runs in 19 innings.

It should be noted that, although he needed 39 pitches to get through the first inning, Cole was able to take the ball into the seventh inning. That’s important because the Yankees are without several key relievers due to injury (Zack Britton, Scot Effross, Chad Green, Michael King, etc.) and will need to cobble things together in the late innings this postseason. The more they get from their starters, the better.

“It was very special for me. It was very special,” Cole said with a smile when asked about the ovation he received after Game 1. “The game’s not over — I left with traffic  — it’s not the most comfortable time to acknowledge the crowd but I appreciated it.”

The eventful fifth inning

There was some right-field funny business in the bottom of the fifth inning. First, Donaldson lifted what he and 47,807 people in the Bronx thought was a go-ahead solo home run into the right-field seats. The ball hit the very top of the wall and came back into play, however, and Donaldson was tagged out after rounding first base on his would-be home run trot. Replays confirmed the ball did indeed hit the top of the wall. It was not a home run.

The next batter, Isiah Kiner-Falefa, poked a single along the line in right field and Wild Card Series hero Oscar Gonzalez misplayed the hop, allowing the ball to go through his legs. Kiner-Falefa made it to third base on the error and Jose Trevino drove him in with a go-ahead sacrifice fly. Right field took a homer away from Donaldson and gave Kiner-Falefa three bases.

“That’s what he’s done all year. He made that error (in the first inning), he bounced back really well,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said about Kiner-Falefa after Game 1. “Obviously then gets a big hit in the corner to set is up. So yeah, it was good he got more chances and kind of bounced back from it.”

Trevino, who made his first All-Star Game this summer, was incredibly clutch during the regular season. He had two walk-off hits and hit .355 with runners in scoring position. The sac fly wasn’t a hit, but it came with two strikes and it gave the Yankees the lead in the postseason. Trevino has really been a godsend for New York this year.

Rizzo gives the Yankees insurance

The Yankees scored their first run on Harrison Bader’s first career postseason home run, and also his first home run as a Yankee. He came over from the Cardinals at the trade deadline and was on the injured list with a foot injury. It wasn’t until mid-September that he was activated, and he went 10 for 46 (.217) in a 14-game tune-up. Bader picked a good time for his first Yankees homer.

Bader tied the game 1-1 and Trevino gave the Yankees a 2-1 lead. In the sixth, Rizzo provided two insurance runs with a homer into the second deck in right field. With Andrew Benintendi hurt and Matt Carpenter currently relegated to pinch-hit duty, Rizzo is the only reliable source of left-handed power in New York’s lineup. The Yankees need him to pepper the short porch.

Prior to Rizzo’s blast, 62-homer man Aaron Judge reminded everyone he is so much more than a home run hitter. He worked a leadoff walk against Cal Quantrill, stole second, then took third when the throw went into center field. Judge went 16 for 19 stealing bases this year in addition to those 62 homers. He’s such a gifted, well-rounded player.

Once Rizzo gave the Yankees a 4-1 lead, manager Aaron Boone was able to navigate through the final three innings with righty Jonathan Loáisiga, lefty Wandy Peralta, and righty Clay Holmes. Game 1 was Peralta’s first appearance since Sept. 18. He missed the last few weeks of the regular season with a back injury. It was also Holmes’ first appearance since Sept. 26. He missed the end of the regular season with a shoulder issue. Clearly, the Yankees were comfortable throwing him (and Peralta) right into the fire.

Up next

Game 2, of course. Historically, teams that win Game 1 of a best-of-five series have gone on to win the series 71 percent of the time. The ALDS schedule is a little unusual this year, with an off-day between Games 1 and 2 and Games 2 and 3. Game 2 is scheduled for Thursday night, though the forecast suggests the weather could be an issue. Whenever Game 2 is played, it’ll be Nestor Cortes (12-4, 2.44 ERA) against Shane Bieber (13-8, 2.88 ERA).

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NASCAR reviewing Cole Custer’s actions on the final lap

What drivers said after Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series first-round cutoff race at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval, where Christopher Bell advanced to the Round of 8 with his third career victory:

Christopher Bell — Finished first: “Whenever I came off pit road and I was the first car with tires, I was just trying to wait and see where I stacked up. I saw there were 11 cars that stayed out on old tires, I was the first one on new tires. I said, ‘I guess we’re going to roll the dice here and see what happens.’ When I got into Turn 1, my spotter did an amazing job. They all started wrecking. He told me to stay tight to the middle, and that kept me out of all the junk in Turn 1.

RESULTS, POINTS: Where everyone finished and the reseeded standings

“Man, you just got to be there at the end of these things. I keep watching all these races where the fastest car doesn’t always win. No secret that road courses have not been our strength this year. We were just there at the right time. We obviously weren’t in position to win. We rolled the dice, gambled, and it paid off for us. I feel really good about (the next round). I knew that this second round of the Playoffs was the troublemaker, with Talladega and then the road course being in here, when we weren’t strong on the road courses. I was really nervous about this round.”

Kevin Harvick — Finished second: “I knew we were going to have to have a perfect corner there with Christopher having such fresher tires.  He was able to get through traffic and was able to roll through a little bit more speed in Turn 1, 2, 3 and 4 and just got in front of me, but we were able to hold Kyle off so it’s still a good day. Our guys did a great job of putting us in position and having a chance.  We were half a lap there from being in the right spot.  It didn’t all work out but still a good day. I knew we were in a bit of a pickle there with Christopher on new tires and I just didn’t want to blow the first corner, I wanted to give us a chance he was just able to roll more speed than we were and from there it was just kind of like damage control and make sure you bring the thing home and that’s what we did. They did a good job. They got us in position and that caution coming out killed us there. We were half a lap from coming to the white and caution, so they did a good job.”

Kyle Busch — Finished third: “It was definitely a good day for our Camry. There at the end, before everything happened, we were just trying to keep it on the track and stay straight. We were really losing rear tire grip and losing time. But we got that late caution, made a pit stop and took advantage of new tires – came up with a third-place finish. Vegas is next week and we always look forward to it. We were fast there in the spring so hopefully we can do the same thing.”

AJ Allmendinger — Finished fourth: “When you are that close to winning, it’s for sure disappointing. But I’m happy with the way this No. 16 Chevy was. It was really fast. We just need to work a little bit on pit road. We lost that little bit of track position, and it was a track position game. Once I got around (Tyler Reddick), I was burning my stuff up trying to catch (Chase Elliott). With those restarts, I knew I was kind of used up already. I got a good restart there and when Chase and I touched kind of through (Turn) two, I went to set up for three and it turned me sideways and I slid a little more. That was unfortunate because that allowed (Kevin Harvick) to get to my bumper and we know Kevin is going to do that if he gets any chance. That’s a part of racing and going for the win. That second restart there, it was just a couple of guys with better tires, and you are just a sitting duck.”

Denny Hamlin — Finished fifth: “It was the type of day where basically wherever you got placed on the track was where you were going to run, unless someone made a mistake in front of you. We preferred that kind of day even though it is what it is even though our team did a great job with strategy and making sure that we junked stage two when we saw we weren’t going to get stage points there. Those guys that were in front of us most of the day ended up behind us and nobody could pass so it worked out nicely for us. All of (the tracks in the third round) are P1 for me and I like all of them. All of them are just perfect for what our strength is, especially with the Toyotas and myself. I’m excited. We had a good test at Martinsville and even though we finished bad there in the spring. We’re going to have to qualify well there and track position is going to be huge. We’re going to go to work and really excited about our prospects in this next round.”

Chase Briscoe — Finished ninth: “What a wild day. I told my guys before we took the initial green in the race, there’s a difference between thinking we could move on and knowing we could move on. This team never gives up. I told them I was never going to give up. It took every bit of it there at the end. To be easily in, then that debris caution comes out. Still, I thought we had a really good shot of making it in. Get wrecked on the backstretch. Crazy at the end of these races, especially the road course race, how much can change so quickly. I had no idea we were even going to have a shot. Truthfully I knew we were probably out. I saw (Austin Cindric) wreck, I thought maybe there’s still a chance. We had so much fresher tires than anybody. Johnny pumped them way up to qualifying pressures, let me go attack, have the ball in my hands. Super proud of this race team. Looking forward to the Round of 8. A lot of really, really good racetracks for me. If we can get to Phoenix, we know we got a good car there, too. … Nobody believed we were gonna get past the Round of 16 and here we are in the Round of 8 and three really, really good racetracks for me coming up, so I’m looking forward to them.”

William Byron — Finished 16th: “Stage 1 was pretty good for us. We got second-place stage points, and try to go for the stage points in Stage 2, missed out. Just both times had to restart in the 30s. Really difficult to get through there and try to pace it with (Briscoe). Just try to keep all four tires on the ground and between the curbs at the end. Certainly, just not how you want to race there at the end, but it was just crazy racing with the green-white-checkered and the way that guys are able to get into each other, make contact, guys spin out and the track gets blocked. It just gets wild there at the end. But we did what we needed to do, which was to get some stage points and finish the race. We’ll move on and get ready for Las Vegas.”

Joey Logano, Finished 18th: “When you have desperate situations like that, people just send it, and it ends up to be a mess. I’m sure there are a lot of scorecards that everybody kept today, and I didn’t dump anybody, so that was great.  No one’s mad at me. I feel good. I like Vegas. We had a pretty good test at Miami and Martinsville has been one of Penske’s best racetracks as of late, so I feel pretty good about it.”

Chase Elliott — Finished 20th: “I thought I had a pretty good launch (on the second-to-last restart) and thought I got through (turns) 1 and 2 good. I thought I gave AJ (Allmendinger) enough room through one and two to not run into the fence. I don’t know if he just got loose, overdrove Turn 3 or whatever, but I ended up on the outside. Whatever the reason, he ran wide and I ended up the track in a super compromised situation. Bummer. Alan (Gustafson, crew chief) called a great race. Our No. 9 Chevy wasn’t great, but it was plenty good enough to win. Our team called a perfect race to get us the lead, and our pit stops were really good to not to have any mistakes and get us a really nice cushion. We had a lot of laps on our tires, but I could maintain my pace out there with having a nice gap. We’ll try again next week. I think it’s going to be a really tough round. Vegas was a struggle for us in the spring. Homestead, we’ve just been really hit-or-miss there. We did have a test there a couple weeks ago, so hopefully we’ve learned from that. Martinsville, it’s just going to be about how you qualify because I don’t see anybody passing there. We’ll see how it goes. Try to bring our A-game. It would have been nice to have some more points from today, but we didn’t and we’ll try again out in Las Vegas.”

Austin Cindric — Finished 21st: “My guys did a great job all weekend. We had a long shot but had a shot at it and kept ourselves in the game. Obviously, I had a great shot at the end. That last caution really stung because we would have been in without that last caution. Old tires against new tires. I wish we would have had probably some better track position and probably do a few things right here and there, but overall great to have a shot, great to be in the playoff picture. I learned a lot in my rookie season racing against a lot of the best. I was a bit of a bonehead on the last couple restarts just trying to make something happen with 30-lap worse tires than everybody around me, but, overall, great experience but just a little bit short. I would have liked to make it further.  That’s the way I look at it. I don’t look at this as an opportunity that everyone is going to have every year. If you’re in a good car with a good team it’s still not guaranteed. We had one guy make it in on points this year and that’s it. There’s past champions that missed out on the playoffs. I’ve got a guy standing next to me right here (Larson) that I think is one of the best drivers, if not the best driver in the field, and he’s not advancing on. This is not an easy format. It’s not that easy and it’s not an opportunity that’s guaranteed every year and I want to make the most of it.”

Ryan Blaney — Finished 26th: “It was nice to come in here with decent points and do a good job in the stages. It’s a shame because I thought our car was super fast, but when you’re stage points racing you just bury yourself and you’re just trying to stay out of everyone else’s junk there at the end. We still ended up getting in other people’s junk because people are running you over and spinning you out, but luckily we had a good points cushion. Got run over by people (on the last restart) just like Indy.  I don’t know who ran me over, but put them on the list I guess. We did the stage game in the first stage and got our points, but then you just bury yourself the rest of the day, and it was so hard to pass today. You kind of bury yourself right at the beginning and it doesn’t matter how fast your car is, you can’t come from 25th and drive up through there. We did a good job. We had a plan coming into this weekend with where we were on points and stuck with that plan. It’s a shame it has to be that way, but on the other side you just try to be as smart as you can. I’m looking forward to getting to Vegas.  I think we’ve come a long way on our mile-and-a-half program. Between Vegas and Homestead and obviously Martinsville is a strong place for us in the spring, so I’m looking forward to it.  We’ve just got to put together good races with no mistakes and keep doing what we’ve been doing. I’d really like to win and not have to worry about the next two weeks, but I think this team has been doing a great job. They’re really focused right now.”

Kyle Larson — Finished 35th: (When were you worried?) “As soon as I hit the wall. Yeah, I mean, you give up that many spots, you know you’re going to be close. Then the caution there. So yeah, I just made way too many mistakes all year long. Made another one today. Ultimately cost us an opportunity to go chase another championship.

“Just extremely mad at myself. You let the team down a number of times this year, and let them down in a big way today. We’ll keep fighting. We’ll come back stronger. I’ll definitely come back stronger and smarter, make better moves out there. Just mad at myself. Bummer, but just got to move on. There’s definitely no other person to blame but myself for today. I feel like our team put ourselves in position as well as we could on points. Got as many stage points as we could. I think it was plus-28 at the time when I screwed up. Just for no reason, either. I wasn’t even pushing that hard at that moment. Got loose, caught my off guard. Yeah, just got to keep working on my craft, just be better, make a lot less mistakes. I made way too many mistakes this whole year. You can’t win a championship like that. Yeah, no surprise that I made another mistake today and took us out of contention.”

Daniel Suarez — Finished 36th: “(Corey LaJoie) wasn’t driving very smart today. He was blocking me and doing all different things that I could have wrecked him like two or three times. I don’t know why he was doing that.

“I’m the only driver in the field who could have finished that race the way my car was (with steering problems). My arms are completely destroyed. I’ve never felt like this in my life. My shoulder is very bad. My hands are destroyed. It was tough. It was very, very tough. We did what we needed to do the first half of the race getting stage points and everything. Once we lost steering, it was just hoping for a little bit of luck. We almost got it right there at the end. It is difficult to rely on luck 100 percent. It is what it is. We have to continue to get better. I think we were the only car that actually had a steering issue. I don’t want to say it was a crappy part because I was the only one that had the problem, but we have to come back to the shop and look at what went wrong. It was very, very bad everywhere. There were more than a couple of times I was just screaming. I needed to get it out. It was for sure the most difficult race I’ve had in my life, but I wasn’t going to give up. I needed to keep pushing and waiting for a little bit of luck. Unfortunately, it didn’t happen, but a little bit unfortunate to (get eliminated) because of an issue. I feel like we were having a normal race in the first half, but it is what it is. We have to continue to keep our heads high and continue to see forward.

“It’s sad (to be eliminated). I felt like it was going to be an easy transfer on a road course being 12 points above and getting a lot of stage points. I think we started Stage 3 18 points above, so it was going to be easy really unless we had an issue. Unfortunately, we had an issue.”

Ross Chastain — Finished 37th: “I’m human, so it hurts to make the mistakes that I made today and yesterday. I’ll take some time here with my guys and when I drive out of this parking lot, I’m going to make a big effort to leave the Roval here. Normally, it’s Monday morning when I’m done with it and look through everything, but we’re onto another round. It’s a testament to our season and our finish in points today. The strategy by (crew chief) Phil Surgen and our strategy with Trackhouse and Team Chevy to get the stage win in Stage Two is ultimately the difference that gave me the buffer when I needed it the most. I will drive off the property here in Concord and leave this here. It’s the No. 1 priority. I hit the wall really hard, so hats off to this car and what NASCAR and the France family has rolled out. I don’t think a year ago I’m able to continue as hard as I hit the wall. I couldn’t believe it when I made the mistake. I’m still in a bit of a disbelief, but when I walk out of here tonight, it’s full speed ahead to Vegas. I have to move on.”



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