Boston Herald

Machado rips RBI double after agreeing to $350M deal

- By David Brandt

PEORIA, ARIZ. >> Manny Machado continues to be a very rich man. He also is still a very good hitter.

Machado ripped an RBI double on Sunday, the same day he agreed to a new $350 million, 11-year contract that will keep him with the San Diego Padres through 2033, according to a person with knowledge of the deal.

The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because Machado must pass a physical before the deal is finalized.

Machado got a big cheer from Padres fans on a chilly afternoon in Arizona before a spring training game against the Diamondbac­ks. The third baseman struck out in his first at-bat before lacing a line-drive double off the base of the left-field wall in San Diego’s nine-run second inning.

Machado finished 2 for 3 at the plate, adding a single in the third.

The 30-year-old had said that after this season, he planned to opt out of the $300 million, 10-year free agent deal he signed in 2019. With the $120 million he already has received, the new deal increases the freespendi­ng Padres’ commitment to Machado to $470 million over 15 years.

Machado finished second in the NL MVP race last year. He’ll anchor a superstar-laden lineup that includes Xander Bogaerts, Juan Soto and Fernando Tatis Jr., who can return on April 20 from an 80game suspension for performanc­e-enhancing drugs.

Machado batted .298 with 32 home runs and 102 RBIs last season.

Back in black (and orange)

Michael Conforto saw his first game action in more than a year, and went 1 for 3 as the San Francisco Giants’ designated hitter against the Cincinnati Reds. He singled his final time up.

“Felt good to be back. I definitely had some nerves.

After the first at-bat most of them went away,” he said.

Conforto, who turns 30 on Wednesday, hadn’t played since Oct. 3, 2021, when he was with the New York Mets. He missed all of 2022 after having right shoulder surgery but signed a two-year, $36 million contract with the Giants in the offseason.

He said the plan is to DH for a couple weeks, then play some outfield.

“Really what matters is getting to Opening Day healthy,” Conforto said. “But today was good.”

Captain Judge

Yankees slugger Aaron Judge received several ovations from the crowd at Steinbrenn­er Field before his first game in pinstripes as the new team captain.

“I felt it with the intro, I felt it on defense, I felt it stepping up to the plate,” the reigning AL MVP said.

Judge was a free agent after last season but ended up signing a $360 million, nine-year contract with the Yankees. He also was named the team’s first captain since Hall of Famer Derek Jeter in 2014.

“He loves the game, and obviously being back here, to be able to put the uni on and go out, I think it was something he was looking forward to,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said.

Trophy do-over

Marlins right-hander Sandy Alcantara received his NL Cy Young Award trophy on Sunday for the second time — and this time he has no reason to give it back.

“I want to keep it for the rest of my life,” Alcantara said. “I think that is for my mom.”

When the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America originally presented Alcantara with the trophy at its January awards dinner, the plaque language dubbed both Alcantara and AL winner Justin Verlander the “most valuble” pitchers in their leagues, leaving out the second “a” in “valuable.”

Afterward, the group told him it would provide a new one.

The new plaque contains the more up-to-date “most outstandin­g” phrasing — and it’s spelled correctly.

Marlins owner Bruce Sherman presented the award to Alcantara at home plate before Miami’s spring training home opener against St. Louis.

“I didn’t expect that I was going to get my award today,” Alcantara said. “I thought I’d go outside and have fun with my teammates. But when I saw the surprise, it made my day today.”

Alcantara went 14-9 with a 2.28 ERA in 2022, pitching a league-high 228 2/3 innings.

Follow up

Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said Major League Baseball is providing updates — nearly in real time — on the rules changes package that is making this spring training unique.

The two major changes are a pitch clock and a limit on extreme infield shifts.

“They did a really nice job of sending out a memo this morning with all the things that took place yesterday and questions that players and managers that just had to be addressed in order that you can cover it with your staff and club as you feel appropriat­e,” Marmol said. “So we did that with our staff and brought two different points with our players because they’ve done a really good job of communicat­ion.”

The new rules already had an effect during the first full day of games: Cal Conley of the Atlanta Braves thought he had just won the game with a twoout, bases-loaded walk-off walk on Saturday. But umpire John Libka ruled that Conley, facing reliever Robert Kwiatkowsk­i of the Boston Red Sox, wasn’t set in the box as the clock wound under eight seconds.

He was ruled out. The game ended in a tie.

Braves manager Brian Snitker said Sunday that Conley’s situation was part of learning process.

“It’s baseball. You’re going to see something you’ve never seen before,” Snitker said. “All to the point where I said I’m glad we’re starting these things when we did. I’m glad we didn’t wait until March 15 or something where we can have a whole month of this, and hopefully in a few weeks that this thing is just normal.”

Scherzer fine with clock

New York Mets righthande­r Max Scherzer described pitching under the new major league rules as a “cat-and-mouse” game.

Contrary to previous years, Scherzer feels the pitcher finally has gained control.

In his first start of the Grapefruit League schedule, Scherzer was touched for a run in the second inning but struck out five while working the first two innings of the Mets’ 6-3 win over Washington.

“Really, the power the pitcher has now — I can totally dictate pace,” the three-time Cy Young Award winner said. “The rule change of the hitter having only one time out changes the complete dynamic of the hitter-and-pitcher dynamic. Yeah, I love it.”

Washington’s Michael Chavis, the second hitter in the second inning, stepped out of the box when he felt Scherzer was taking too long. That was fine with Scherzer.

He held the ball for more than 10 seconds before delivering the next pitch as Chavis had to remain in the batter’s box, no matter the level of his impatience. The fact that Chavis ultimately singled to right was immaterial. Scherzer had imposed his will.

“It’s a cat-and-mouse game,” Scherzer said. “There’s rules and I’ll operate within whatever the rules are.

“But I want to work quick. It’s always the hitter that can slow me down. The hitter doesn’t have that ability anymore.”

 ?? ASHLEY LANDIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? San Diego Padres’ Manny Machado follows through on an RBI-double during the third inning in Game 2 of a baseball NL Division Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Oct. 12, 2022, in Los Angeles.
ASHLEY LANDIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE San Diego Padres’ Manny Machado follows through on an RBI-double during the third inning in Game 2 of a baseball NL Division Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Oct. 12, 2022, in Los Angeles.

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