MLB Star Rushed To Hospital After Frightening Crash

In a pivotal matchup against the Brewers, the Reds see both triumph and turmoil as Dane Myers' incredible catch turns into a concerning exit.

The Reds got their series opener in Milwaukee off to a promising start, but the night took a tense turn when Dane Myers made a spectacular play and paid for it.

In the bottom of the fourth, with Cincinnati protecting a 1-0 lead, Myers laid out for an unforgettable catch at the wall. It was the kind of grab that can swing a game - and maybe even a dugout - but the aftermath looked rough. Myers appeared to take a serious shot to his shoulder on the play, and he was soon met by the medical cart before leaving the game.

The reaction around the moment said plenty. From every angle, it was the sort of collision that leaves a team holding its breath. It was also a huge effort from a player who, at least in that instant, looked fully committed to helping the Reds claw through a season that has left them searching for answers.

With Myers out, manager Terry Francona turned to TJ Friedl in center field. Friedl had recently been called back up during the Pirates series.

At the time this was being written, Cincinnati was still clinging to a 3-0 lead, and Myers’ play had at least given the Reds a jolt in a spot where they badly needed one.

The matchup itself already carried a heavy load. The Reds entered the series after winning on the road against the Pittsburgh Pirates and trying to keep their season alive against a Brewers team that has controlled this matchup for a long time. Milwaukee has won 15 of the last 17 series between the clubs, which makes any Cincinnati success in this spot feel like a steep climb.

There was also a small opening for the Reds coming in. Milwaukee had leaned hard on its bullpen over the weekend against the Chicago Cubs, using all three of its top relief weapons multiple times. That could leave the Brewers a bit worn down as Cincinnati arrived.

Whether the Reds can turn that into something bigger is another question. But Myers’ effort gave them exactly the kind of spark a team in their position needs: a player throwing everything he has into one play, even if it comes with a scary price.

In Other News...

Mets Make Another Desperate Upside Bet As Deadline Pressure Builds

With the trade deadline closing in, the Mets have added another low-cost lottery ticket in Christopher Morel, signing the versatile slugger to a minor-league deal and sending him to Triple-A Syracuse. It is the kind of move that fits where the club is right now: a bet on power and positional flexibility from a player who has shown real upside, even if the fit has never been clean.

Morel brings the kind of ceiling that keeps teams interested. He has already flashed enough pop to make evaluators dream on more, but the swing-and-miss and defensive questions have followed him from stop to stop, including a rough showing with the Marlins this year. For the Mets, it is another reminder that urgency at this time of year can push a front office to keep searching for value anywhere it can find it. [Read more 🡒]

Mets Update Turns Messy As Luis Robert Jr. Looms And Criticism Grows

Luis Robert Jr. is set to start a rehab assignment with the Syracuse Mets on June 30, a development that naturally has Mets fans watching closely for any ripple effect around the roster picture. It also arrives at a time when the organization is dealing with more noise than usual around how decisions are being made, with old-school voices around the team making their discomfort with the modern game pretty clear.

Former Mets coach Eric Chavez recently went public with sharp criticism of the clubs analytics-heavy approach, and he even tied some of that frustration to Juan Sotos distance from the team last year. Wally Backman added to the chorus in a WFAN interview, making his own disdain for analytics plain and helping turn what could have been a routine update into another reminder that the Mets are still sorting through a broader debate about how they want to operate. [Read more 🡒]

Bo Bichettes Toronto Return Carries Real Emotion For Mets Fans

Bo Bichettes return to Rogers Centre brought a familiar kind of weight with it for Mets fans watching from afar. Now wearing New York colors, the infielder stepped back onto the field against the Blue Jays for the first time since signing with the Mets, and the night carried the residue of everything he built in Toronto across eight seasons, from two All-Star nods to his role in the clubs recent playoff runs.

The reception said plenty about how he was remembered there, with Blue Jays fans greeting him warmly as the setting turned emotional instead of merely nostalgic. Bichette spent a long time as one of Torontos defining players, and his first trip back came with the kind of atmosphere that makes a regular season game feel a little more like a homecoming, even with a new uniform and a different chapter now underway. [Read more 🡒]