Los Angeles Times

THREE UP, THREE DOWN

WHAT’S TRENDING IN MLB

- — Bill Shaikin

Beltre 3K: Adrian ▲Beltre made his major league debut with the Dodgers in 1998. He doubled in his first at-bat, against Chuck Finley of the Angels. Beltre has played so long and so well that he is on the verge of his 3,000th career hit, an almost certain admission ticket to Cooperstow­n. Of the 30 players with 3,000 hits, the ones with no Hall of Fame plaque are sinners (Pete Rose, Rafael Palmeiro), not yet eligible (Derek Jeter, Ichiro Suzuki) or both (Alex Rodriguez). Add Beltre’s premium glove and renowned leadership to his consistent­ly strong bat and he remains one of the most underrated players of his era, as evidenced over the past week, when his run to 3,000 got less attention than a weird play in which an umpire puffed his chest and ejected Beltre for moving the on-deck circle.

Cy and sigh: Clayton Kershaw’s back injury all ▲but assures Max Scherzer of the Washington Nationals of his second consecutiv­e National League Cy Young Award. Kershaw has finished among the top five in Cy Young voting six consecutiv­e years; Scherzer has done so in five (the first two in the AL). Kershaw (2.04) leads Scherzer (2.23) in earned-run average. He needs 21 innings to qualify for what would be his sixth season leading the majors in that category. If he had pitched another 13 innings last season, Kershaw would be trying to lead the majors in ERA for the seventh time in eight years. Scherzer last Thursday celebrated his 32nd birthday by pitching six innings for the victory, with a single and two walks at bat.

Stars and stripes: Willie Mays and Ted Williams ▲are among the baseball stars who sacrificed part of their careers to serve in the United States military. That tradition has been revived by pitcher Griffin Jax, whom the Minnesota Twins drafted from Air Force in the third round last year. Jax and the Twins originally thought he could meet his two-year service commitment in the reserves while playing in the minor leagues but, under the Trump administra­tion, the Defense Department no longer excuses athletes from active duty. Jax reported for duty last week, but not before winning his last start at Class-A Cedar Rapids and walking off the mound to a standing ovation.

Debut disaster: ▼Michael Blazek was the 1,068th player selected in the 2007 draft. After 345 games over 11 profession­al seasons, he made the first start of his major league career last Thursday, for the Milwaukee Brewers. He pitched 21⁄3 innings and gave up six home runs to the Nationals, including back-toback-to-back-to-back shots to Brian Goodwin, Wilmer Difo, Bryce Harper and Ryan Zimmerman. Blazek became the first pitcher in major league history to give up five homers in one inning. “Not the way I wanted it to go,” Blazek said, “obviously.” Blazek pitched to 15 batters, giving up as many home runs as Houston Astros ace Dallas Keuchel had given up to 283 batters this season.

Dansby down: The trade that damned Diamond▼backs executives Dave Stewart and Tony La Russa in Arizona was the one in which they acquired pitcher Shelby Miller from the Atlanta Braves for shortstop Dansby Swanson, six months after taking Swanson with the first overall pick in the 2015 draft. Miller went 3-12 with a 6.15 ERA last year, Stewart and La Russa were removed, and Miller underwent elbow ligament replacemen­t surgery this year. But Swanson, 23, fared so poorly in Atlanta — batting .213 with a .599 on-base-plus-slugging percentage, each figure the second-lowest in the NL — that the Braves demoted him to triple-A last Thursday. Mitigating factor for Atlanta: Outfielder Ender Inciarte, a throw-in to the deal with Swanson, was an All-Star this season.

Don’t do me like that: Wrigley Field is tucked into ▼a residentia­l neighborho­od. Wrigley did not add lights until 1988 — amid the Cubs’ threat to flee for an antiseptic suburban stadium — and the number of night events there is limited by the city. The number is too few for Crane Kenney, the Cubs’ president of business operations, who told WSCR the Cubs not only have to beat rival teams, “we also have to beat the city … to try and win games.” They could have had more night games had they not used some of their allocated night dates for concerts — Tom Petty played Wrigley last month — because the Cubs need not share concert revenue with other teams.

 ?? Matt York AP ?? A SECOND straight Cy Young for Max Scherzer? It sure looks that way.
Matt York AP A SECOND straight Cy Young for Max Scherzer? It sure looks that way.
 ?? Nick Wass AP ?? MICHAEL BLAZEK of Milwaukee gave up five homers in one inning.
Nick Wass AP MICHAEL BLAZEK of Milwaukee gave up five homers in one inning.

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