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  • NCAAB: Ex-Creighton F Arthur Kaluma transferring to K-State

    NCAAB: Ex-Creighton F Arthur Kaluma transferring to K-State


    Former Creighton forward Arthur Kaluma announced Sunday he is transferring to Kansas State.

    The 6-foot-7 rising junior chose the Wildcats over Kentucky and Alabama after a weekend visit to Manhattan, Kan.

    Kaluma was the highest-ranked player remaining in the transfer portal, according to ESPN.

    He averaged 11.8 points and 6.0 rebounds in 37 starts for the Bluejays in 2022-23. Over two seasons at Creighton, Kaluma averaged 11.1 points, 5.7 rebounds and 1.5 assists in 68 games (67 starts).

    –Field Level Media

  • NBA: Kevin Love rejoins Heat in Denver after birth of child

    NBA: Kevin Love rejoins Heat in Denver after birth of child


    Miami Heat forward Kevin Love rejoined the team in Denver on Sunday, one day after his wife, model Kate Bock, gave birth.

    Love missed the Heat’s flight to the Mile High City and flew on his own Sunday to watch film and handle media responsibilities, one day before Monday’s Game 5 of the NBA Finals.

    “Everybody is happy and healthy,” Love said during a press conference. “… Was able to make it in for our film session.

    “Got a little bit of sleep, so today will be good to get up and down, get acclimated here and get some treatments, get some rest and be ready to roll.”

    Love didn’t say if the child was a boy or a girl.

    The Heat trail the Denver Nuggets 3-1 in the best-of-seven series. Only one team has ever recovered from such a deficit to win the Finals — the Cleveland Cavaliers, who beat the Golden State Warriors in 2016.

    Interestingly, Love was a key member of that Cleveland squad.

    “Naturally when your back is up against the wall you start to look for answers, solutions,” said Love, a five-time All-Star. “But we’re a team that as you know has been super resilient. We understand that it’s every possession, it’s one game.

    “I know that’s something that is cliche and everybody says but again, we feel like if we come out, have a good start tomorrow, play extremely hard and give ourselves a chance and take it back to Miami, that is right where we want to be.”

    Love, 34, joined the Heat in February after reaching a buyout with Cleveland. He averaged 7.7 points and 5.7 rebounds in 21 games (17 starts) for Miami in the regular season, and he is contributing 7.1 points and 5.7 boards in 19 postseason games (17 starts).

    –Field Level Media

  • NBA: On brink of first title, Nuggets tune out noise to focus on Heat

    NBA: On brink of first title, Nuggets tune out noise to focus on Heat


    One victory away from the first NBA title in franchise history and the Denver Nuggets prefer to act as if the Finals have never started.

    The Nuggets took a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven championship series with a 108-95 road victory over the Miami Heat on Friday. The series shifts back to Denver for Game 5 on Monday and there are plenty of those who are anticipating a crowning achievement.

    Nuggets coach Michael Malone is not one of them.

    “Yeah, just understand that we haven’t done anything,” Malone said. “I told our guys, the first thing I said (after the Game 4 victory), ‘We’re not celebrating. It’s a good win. We’ve done our job. But we’re not celebrating like we’ve done anything yet.’”

    Malone’s plan over the weekend, in addition to figuring out how to get past the Heat one more time, was to have his players ignore all media — social and otherwise — and keep their minds on the task at hand as if it were still significantly out of reach.

    “Don’t listen to everybody telling you how great you are because we haven’t done a damn thing yet,” Malone said. “We have to win another game to be world champions, and we’re going to do that by simply taking it one quarter at a time.

    “We stay true to our identity, we’ll give ourselves a great chance to do that.”

    For everybody outside of the Nuggets’ inner circle, there is plenty of evidence that their time is now. If not in Game 5 then in 6 or 7 during the coming days.

    The Nuggets’ Nikola Jokic has nearly averaged a triple-double for the entire playoff run with 30.1 points, 13.3 rebounds and 9.8 assists. In the Finals he has scored 30.8 points with 13.5 rebounds and 8.0 assists.

    Aaron Gordon had what was perhaps his best game in a Nuggets uniform during Game 5 with 27 points on 11-of-15 shooting (3 of 4 from 3-point range).

    Gordon also has kept Heat star Jimmy Butler in check on the defensive end. Butler has averaged 21.8 points per game in the series, although he has been more productive on the offensive end in the last two games. But as his scoring output has ticked up in the past two games, his rebound and assist numbers have dropped.

    The eighth-seeded team in the Eastern Conference doesn’t seem to have enough offense to keep up with the Nuggets. All three of the Heat’s defeats in the series have been by double digits, although they will take solace in the fact that their lone victory — 111-108 in Game 2 — came at Denver.

    “Same thing it’s always been, it’s one game at a time,” Butler said. “Now we are in a must-win situation every single game, which we’re capable of. Some correctible things we’ve got to do, but it’s not impossible. We’ve got to go out there and do it. We’ve got three to get.”

    Bam Adebayo has averaged 22.3 points and 12.5 rebounds during the four games of the NBA Finals, up from his averages of 17.8 points and 9.8 rebounds in the playoffs. But Miami has been held to 95 points or fewer in all three defeats.

    While the Heat’s Tyler Herro appears close to returning from a hand injury that occurred in the opening game of the playoffs, the shooting guard still has not contributed to the cause, leaving 20.1 points per game from the regular season on the bench.

    “All we are going to focus on is getting this thing back to … Miami and things can shift very quickly,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “It’s going to be a gnarly game in Denver that is built for the competitors that we have in our locker room.”

    –Field Level Media

  • NBA: Report: Celtics hiring Charles Lee as lead assistant coach

    NBA: Report: Celtics hiring Charles Lee as lead assistant coach


    The Boston Celtics are finalizing a deal to hire Charles Lee as the lead assistant on Joe Mazzulla’s coaching staff, ESPN reported Sunday.

    Lee, who was a finalist for the head coaching positions with the Detroit Pistons and Toronto Raptors, has been an assistant with the Milwaukee Bucks for the past four seasons.

    Before following former Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer to Milwaukee, Lee worked on Budenholzer’s staff for five seasons with the Atlanta Hawks (2014-18).

    Lee, 38, began his coaching career as an assistant at his alma mater Bucknell from 2012-14.

    He joins a revamped coaching staff in Boston that also includes former Philadelphia 76ers assistant Sam Cassell.

    Former Celtics assistants Aaron Miles, Mike Moser and Ben Sullivan left to join former Boston head coach Ime Udoka’s staff with the Houston Rockets.

    –Field Level Media

  • MLB: D-backs aim to keep turning heads in battle with Phillies

    MLB: D-backs aim to keep turning heads in battle with Phillies


    The Arizona Diamondbacks, who went 52-110 two seasons ago, are tied for the best record in the National League as mid-June arrives.

    It has been quite a turnaround for the Diamondbacks, who look for their sixth straight victory and 12th in 14 games when they host the Philadelphia Phillies on Monday night in the opener of a four-game series in Phoenix.

    The Diamondbacks last made the playoffs in 2017 but are suddenly looking like a possible postseason participant as they sit 15 games above .500 and are tied with the powerful Atlanta Braves for the best mark in the NL.

    Arizona leads the big-market Los Angeles Dodgers by 3 1/2 games in the NL West race after rallying for a 7-5 victory over the host Detroit Tigers on Sunday. The Diamondbacks pushed across four runs in the ninth inning to snatch the win.

    “You’re down to your final out, you’re fighting and scratching all day long for every inch, and you come up with the big hit,” Arizona manager Torey Lovullo said afterward. “It’s just a testament to what these guys believe every single day. That they can go out and win a baseball game no matter what the circumstances are.”

    Fueling the Diamondbacks’ rise is rookie outfielder Corbin Carroll, who is 10-for-19 with three homers, two doubles, one triple, seven runs and eight RBIs over his past four games.

    On Sunday, Carroll went 3-for-5 for his third three-hit outing in the four-game span. He also stole his 19th base of the season while scoring twice and knocking in a run.

    Carroll, 22, was impressed with the composure of his teammate as Arizona scored five runs in the final two innings.

    “There’s no panic, everyone’s relaxed,” Carroll said. “And when you’re playing relaxed, you’re playing good baseball.”

    Philadelphia is also playing solid baseball with seven victories in its past eight games.

    The defending NL champions are still one game below .500 despite their recent flurry and will be looking to end some recent issues in Arizona.

    The Phillies are just 4-12 in Phoenix since the start of the 2017 season.

    They arrive with some momentum as the recent hot stretch includes taking two of three from the Dodgers, including Sunday’s 7-3 home victory.

    “We’ve been playing well for a bit now, so that’s good,” Philadelphia manager Rob Thomson said afterward. “Now we’ve got to go play a really good team and win on the road. That’s our next goal.”

    Bryce Harper reached base four times on two singles and two walks. Trea Turner had three hits and scored three times.

    “This is the kind of baseball we knew we could play,” Turner said of the recent stretch.

    Left-hander Matt Strahm (4-3, 3.61 ERA) will make his ninth start of the season for the Phillies in the opener. He is expected to pitch one or two innings.

    Strahm pitched one inning of relief against the Dodgers on Friday and allowed three runs on two hits, both homers. He had served as the opener in his previous outing on June 3 when he retired all six batters he faced against the Washington Nationals.

    Strahm was the opener against Arizona on May 23 and allowed two runs and three hits in two innings. He is 2-3 with a 4.30 ERA in 21 career appearances (four starts) against the Diamondbacks.

    Arizona’s Evan Longoria is 3-for-6 with two homers against Strahm.

    The Diamondbacks will counter with left-hander Tommy Henry (3-1, 4.37), who beat the Phillies on May 22. Henry gave up two runs and four hits in 5 2/3 innings during the 6-3 triumph.

    Henry was roughed up for a season-worst five runs in his last outing when he received a no-decision against the Washington Nationals on Tuesday. He gave up five hits and three walks while striking out two.

    Henry is 1-1 with an 8.38 ERA in two career starts against Philadelphia. Kyle Schwarber and Bryson Stott have each homered off Henry.

    –Field Level Media

  • MLB: Boston hopes home — and Rockies — mean more runs

    MLB: Boston hopes home — and Rockies — mean more runs


    In search of more offense, the Boston Red Sox return home to open a three-game homestand against the Colorado Rockies on Monday night.

    Although Boston won two of three games against the New York Yankees over the weekend, the Red Sox were held to seven runs in the series. Boston has scored three runs or fewer in eight of its last nine games and has a 3-6 record over that span.

    “We have traffic,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said of the Red Sox’s ability to get on base following Saturday’s 3-1 loss to the Yankees. “We’re working the counts, but obviously we’re not scoring runs. We’re not finishing anything. The two-out hits … they’re always important in this game and we’ve just got to find a way to get it going, finish the at-bats.”

    Monday’s contest will be the start of a 10-game road trip for Colorado, which ended a six-game losing streak by beating San Diego 5-4 Sunday. That victory also ended the team’s five-game losing streak at home.

    Ryan McMahon hit a game-tying home run in the ninth inning for the Rockies, and, after a 1-hour, 25-minute rain delay, Nolan Jones hit a game-winning home run later in the ninth.

    Colorado also got a home run from second baseman Coco Montes in his major league debut.

    Left-hander James Paxton (2-1, 3.81 ERA) is scheduled to start on the mound for the Red Sox on Monday. He’s 1-3 with a 4.82 ERA in four career starts against the Rockies.

    Paxton struck out nine and gave up two runs in seven innings during his last start to help the Red Sox defeat Cleveland 5-4 last Tuesday.

    “We feel really confident whenever Paxton is taking the bump right now,” Red Sox outfielder Rob Refsnyder said. “He’s got pretty special stuff as you see. A high 90s fastball, kind of just bearing in. He gives us ace-caliber stuff.”

    The Rockies will be looking for another strong start from right-hander Connor Seabold, who took a no-hitter into the sixth inning of Wednesday’s 5-4 loss to San Francisco. The no-hit bid ended when LaMonte Wade singled with one out in the sixth.

    Seabold (1-2, 5.10) limited the Giants to two runs on two hits in six innings before departing in and ultimately receiving a no-decision. He struck out four and walked two.

    “That’s the version that you’d like to see out of Connor and his stuff,” Colorado manager Bud Black said following that game. “Four pitches — fastball command to both sides of the plate, good changeup, slider, a couple of curveballs. A mix of pitches, changing speeds, disrupting timing of the hitters, crowding some guys on their hands.”

    Before facing the Giants, Seabold allowed one run on three hits in 5 1/3 innings against Arizona on June 1. He struck out five and walked two in that game — also a 5-4 loss in which he did not get a decision.

    The Rockies acquired Seabold from the Red Sox in January. He spent most of the 2022 season with Triple-A Worcester, where he went 8-2 with a 3.32 ERA. Seabold has never pitched against the Red Sox.

    Colorado catcher Elias Diaz was not in the lineup Sunday after he was hit in the mask by a foul ball during Saturday’s game. Catcher Brian Serven was recalled from Triple-A Albuquerque for Sunday’s game against San Diego, though he did not play.

    –Field Level Media

  • MLB: Suddenly-surging A’s ready for majors’ best, face Rays

    MLB: Suddenly-surging A’s ready for majors’ best, face Rays


    The team with the longest active winning streak in the majors and the club with the best overall record collide on Monday night when the Oakland Athletics play host to the Tampa Bay Rays to open a four-game series.

    The set is a rematch of a lopsided three-game sweep by the Rays over the A’s while Tampa Bay was opening the campaign at a record-setting pace and Oakland was enduring a historically bad start.

    The Rays and A’s still rank as the major league’s best and worst, respectively, in terms of wins, but that hasn’t been the case over the last five days, during which Oakland, on the road, shocked the Pittsburgh Pirates and Milwaukee Brewers for five consecutive wins.

    The fifth straight victory came Sunday and capped a three-game sweep that knocked the Brewers out of first place in the National League Central.

    “The clubhouse is just becoming closer,” Athletics outfielder Seth Brown said after contributing a three-run homer to Sunday’s 8-6 win. “Guys are really starting to get to know each other and just starting to kind of jell as a team a bit.”

    Coincidentally, the run has occurred just as A’s fans, seeking to get owner John Fisher to sell the team in hopes of keeping the club in Oakland, have scheduled a “reverse boycott” for Tuesday night. The goal of the banner-hanging, T-shirt-wearing group is to sell out the Oakland Coliseum to demonstrate the problem in Oakland isn’t the stadium or the fans, but rather the disinterested owner.

    Looking to extend the team’s winning streak to six games before Tuesday’s scheduled event will be right-hander James Kaprielian (1-6, 7.21 ERA), who got the run going with his most impressive start of the season his last time out in Pittsburgh. With the A’s having lost their previous five games, he limited the Pirates to one earned run in six innings in an 11-2 road win.

    Kaprielian was bombed for seven runs in 4 2/3 innings in an 11-0 loss at Tampa Bay in the earlier series, a game in which he served up home runs to Wander Franco, Brandon Lowe and Harold Ramirez. It was his first and only career matchup with the Rays.

    Franco drilled his eighth homer of the season Sunday when the Rays won an early-season series with the top team in the American League West, the Texas Rangers, by taking the rubber match 7-3.

    “All the guys are showing what they’re capable of doing,” said Franco, whose homer was his first since May 9. “We’re going to keep putting pressure on the other guys. Hopefully we can keep it going. Hopefully we can get 100 wins.”

    The Rays rank second in the majors with 391 runs. Despite their recent surge, the A’s are third from the bottom with 245.

    Right-hander Zach Eflin (8-1, 2.97) will attempt to extend his personal winning streak to five games when he is scheduled to get the ball for the Rays in the series opener. He is coming off 6 2/3 shutout innings in a 7-0 home win over the Minnesota Twins last Tuesday.

    Eflin will be making his second start of the season against the A’s, having beaten them 9-5 at home on April 7. It will be his third career start against the A’s. He has gone 1-0 with a 2.70 ERA in his first two head-to-heads, neither of which were in Oakland.

    –Field Level Media

  • MLB: Surging Angels visit Rangers in AL West matchup

    MLB: Surging Angels visit Rangers in AL West matchup


    The Los Angeles Angels are coming off a 5-1 homestand. The Texas Rangers lost two of three on a brief road trip to Tampa Bay as the top teams in baseball squared off.

    Next up is a matchup between the American League West foes as the Angels and Rangers meet for a four-game series starting Monday in Arlington, Texas. It’s the second series of the season between the teams as the Rangers took two of three in Anaheim from May 5-7.

    The Angels are riding high, though, following a 9-4 victory over the Seattle Mariners on Sunday to close the successful six-game homestand. Shohei Ohtani had three hits to extend his hitting streak to eight games, but shortstop Zach Neto was the star of the game with two home runs.

    “I’ve been working for this for a long time,” Neto told Bally Sports West during a postgame interview. “Everything happens for a reason. Today, I had a really good day in the box and I’m just going to try and keep it going.”

    Neto went on to say the Angels will be looking to carry this momentum into Texas.

    “Just trying to keep it going in there and having the guys in the locker room just moving in the right direction and keep winning baseball games,” he said.

    Left-hander Tyler Anderson (3-1, 5.62 ERA), Monday’s starter for the Angels, earned a win in his previous start against the Cubs on Tuesday. He gave up four runs on five hits with three walks and five strikeouts over five innings.

    Anderson will be facing the Rangers for the second time this season. In a no-decision effort on May 5 in Anaheim, he allowed three runs (two earned) on five hits with five walks and six strikeouts over five innings in the Angels’ 5-4 victory.

    Anderson is 1-0 with a 2.64 ERA in six career games against the Rangers, including five starts. His lone victory came on Aug. 17, 2021, as a member of the Mariners when they faced the Rangers in Arlington. Anderson threw six innings of one-run ball that day.

    For the Rangers, Monday starter Dane Dunning (5-1, 2.52) has been arguably the most pleasant surprise of the season. Dunning stepped into the rotation for Jacob deGrom in early May and has gone 3-1 with a 2.97 ERA in six starts.

    The first start Dunning made was against the Angels on May 5. He took a no-decision after throwing five scoreless innings, scattering two hits. Against the Angels over his career, Dunning is 2-3 with a 4.89 ERA over nine starts.

    Dunning earned the win in his last start vs. St. Louis on Tuesday despite not having his best stuff. He allowed a season-high four runs on seven hits with two walks and one strikeout over 5 2/3 innings. Three of the hits were home runs, the most Dunning has given up in his career and ending what had been a streak of 48 2/3 innings without allowing a home run.

    As a team, the Rangers might have lost two of three to the Rays but have still won 15 of their last 21 and are 21-9 at home.

    “A hard-fought series,” Rangers manager Bruce Bochy said after Sunday’s loss. “You saw two good teams going at it. Two teams that put up runs, have good pitching. We’re disappointed we lost the series, but I thought we played well.”

    –Field Level Media

  • MLB: Elly De La Cruz, Reds to open set with Royals

    MLB: Elly De La Cruz, Reds to open set with Royals


    For all the recent positivity around the Cincinnati Reds’ youth movement, there remains plenty of uncertainty around the Kansas City Royals’ future plans.

    The teams begin a three-game series in Kansas City on Monday, and Cincinnati will be bringing to town one of baseball’s most buzzworthy players in third baseman Elly De La Cruz.

    The 21-year-old is 8-for-22 (.364) with a home run, four RBIs and three stolen bases in his first six games since being brought up from Triple-A Louisville last week. He scored the go-ahead run and had two hits, an RBI and a steal in Cincinnati’s 4-3 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday.

    “He’s a special player,” Reds outfielder Will Benson said. “I can hands down say I’ve never played with a player like that. I’ve played with really good hitters like Elly, but I’ve never seen a complete package like that before.”

    While Cincinnati has gone 24-20 since opening the season with a 7-15 mark, Kansas City has been outscored 41-14 during its current six-game losing streak.

    The Royals were swept in three games over the weekend by the Baltimore Orioles, who cruised to an 11-3 win in the finale on Sunday. Kansas City has scored a total of eight runs in its last five games.

    “It’s been a handful of days now where we’ve struggled to score,” Royals manager Matt Quatraro said. “Nobody is going to be happy with that. These guys are all diligent workers. They give their best, and when it’s not coming through or getting the results, it’s frustrating.”

    Kansas City will send right-hander Zack Greinke (1-6, 4.59 ERA) to the mound in the series opener. He is seeking his first victory since May 3, and in his last start, he gave up five runs over 4 1/3 innings in a 6-1 loss to the Miami Marlins on Tuesday.

    Greinke, 39, has provided a strong veteran presence in the young Royals’ clubhouse. He has gone 1-2 with a 3.00 ERA in six home starts this season.

    “Whether it’s five, six, seven innings, whatever it is, you can count on him to keep you in the game,” Quatraro said. “Being able to control all the stuff going on around him. Not just facing hitters. He’s great with the run game. He’s great at fielding his position. Calm demeanor. Just all of that.”

    Greinke is 8-2 with a 2.38 ERA in 14 career starts versus Cincinnati and has completed at least six innings in 13 of the 14 starts. He last faced the Reds on July 19, 2017, when he allowed three runs over five innings as a member of the Arizona Diamondbacks.

    Cincinnati will counter with right-hander Luke Weaver (1-2, 6.27), who escaped with a no-decision on Tuesday after allowing a season-high seven runs over 3 2/3 innings against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

    Weaver, 29, is looking to snap a five-game winless streak. He has given up a total of 15 runs with a 25-to-4 strikeout-to-walk ratio over 25 1/3 innings in that stretch.

    Weaver is facing his former team after posting a 5.59 ERA in 14 relief appearances with Kansas City last season.

    Kansas City will be facing a rising Cincinnati team led by an impressive group of rookies, including De La Cruz, starting pitcher Andrew Abbott and infielder Matt McLain.

    “Their level of preparation when they’ve gotten here is really incredible,” Reds manager David Bell said. “So we’ve talked about how our player-development system deserves a lot of that credit, and they’re just really good players. So it’s been an easier transition than maybe it should be so far.”

    –Field Level Media

  • MLB: Cards look to break out of rut, welcome Giants to town

    MLB: Cards look to break out of rut, welcome Giants to town


    The struggling St. Louis Cardinals will look to generate more offense and clean up their fielding when they begin a three-game set against the visiting San Francisco Giants on Monday night.

    The Cardinals have lost nine of their last 12 games heading into the series opener. St. Louis hitters went 1-for-18 with runners in scoring position over the last two games, a pair of losses to the Cincinnati Reds.

    St. Louis also made multiple mental and physical mistakes in the field.

    “We have to be perfect to win right now,” Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said after Sunday’s 4-3 loss. “We don’t have the luxury of giving up extra outs or making a mistake or walking a guy. That’s where we’re at.

    “There’s certain guys in our lineup that feel pretty good and there’s certain guys that don’t. It’s been difficult to string together quality at-bats to produce a crooked-number type inning.”

    Catcher Willson Contreras is 3-for-24 in June after batting just .158 In May. Shortstop Paul DeJong is 6-for-32 in June after hitting just .202 in May.

    The Cardinals open the series by turning to left-hander Matthew Liberatore (1-2, 6.00 ERA), who will make his first career appearance against the Giants.

    Liberatore threw five scoreless innings in his first start since his call-up from Triple-A Memphis. Since then, he has allowed 11 runs (10 earned) in 10 innings over his last three outings — one relief appearance and two starts.

    He blamed his lack of curveball command for his recent struggles.

    “I think it’s being more consistent with it,” Liberatore said. “When I’m able to land it for a strike and establish the fastball, I tend to have better results. So it’s just going this week and making sure that every day the curveball feels good and it’s where I want it and carrying that into the next outing.”

    The Giants will try to get right-hander Logan Webb (4-6, 3.09) back on track on Monday. He has a 5.11 ERA in two starts this month, allowing seven runs on 12 hits and three walks in 12 1/3 innings.

    Those struggles have come after Webb posted a sterling 1.30 ERA in five starts in May.

    Webb lost his previous start against the Cardinals this season on April 27. He allowed just two runs on seven hits while striking out seven, but he fell to 2-2 with a 5.55 ERA against St. Louis in five career starts.

    The Giants have won four of their last six games. They got their offense rolling during their 13-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs on Sunday, which featured shortstop Brandon Crawford making his pitching debut in the blowout.

    Giants second baseman Thairo Estrada hit two homers and drove in four runs in Sunday’s win. He has a 1.076 on-base-plus-slugging percentage in June.

    “He’s been a catalyst to our team,” Giants outfielder Joc Pederson told NBC Sports Bay Area in reference to Estrada. “He hits the ball all over the field, he steals bases, he makes web gems and then he can also knock it out of the park. He’s doing it all, it’s fun to watch, I’m really happy for him.”

    Pederson also hit two homers and had four RBIs against the Cubs on Sunday.

    –Field Level Media