Los Angeles Times

THREE UP, THREE DOWN

WHAT’S TRENDING IN MLB

- —Bill Shaikin

Mariners take on Leake: With one eye on September and another on 2018, the Seattle Mariners acquired Mike Leake from the St. Louis Cardinals. Leake, a durable but otherwise average pitcher, got five years at $16 million per year from the Cardinals in free agency two offseasons ago; the Mariners assumed three years at $13 million per year. Could Leake become as overpaid in Seattle as he was in St. Louis? As the Dodgers and other analytical­ly oriented teams ask less out of their back-end starters — five innings, please, and we won’t let you take a third turn through the lineup — the market value of those starters might drop below $13 million annually.

Valley boys: By trading Leake, the Cardinals opened a spot for Jack Flaherty, who joined Lucas Giolito (Chicago White Sox) and Max Fried (Atlanta Braves) in the 2012 rotation at Harvard-Westlake High. When else did three pitchers from the same high school staff become first-round draft picks? Just once, as far as Baseball America can tell: Matt Drews, Doug Million and Bobby Seay from Sarasota (Fla.) High two decades ago. In 2012, the senior year for Giolito and Fried, Giolito suffered a season-ending elbow injury. Harvard-Westlake was eliminated from the playoffs when Flaherty, then a sophomore, lost to Placentia Valencia. Flaherty’s record for the rest of his Harvard-Westlake career: 23-0.

Play ball: When you hear about a big NFL contract, be sure to read the fine print. NFL contracts are not fully guaranteed. So even though the Detroit Lions signed quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford this week to what was trumpeted as an NFL-record $135 million, the guarantee turned out to be $92 million. That’s nice, but it’s less than half the guarantee Stafford’s high school teammate, Clayton Kershaw, received from the Dodgers three years ago. As a bonus, Kershaw isn’t playing the sport that subjects participan­ts to the risk that part of their brains might turn into mush later in life.

National crisis: When the Dodgers eliminated the Washington Nationals from the playoffs in October, the Nationals were left with the lingering image of the injured Stephen Strasburg throwing bullpen sessions in the hope he could pitch if the Nationals advanced. The Nationals’ out-of-commission star this October could be Bryce Harper, who injured his left knee and calf three weeks ago after slipping on a wet base. That puts his availabili­ty for the playoffs in jeopardy. Harper had four hits in 17 at-bats against the Dodgers in a National League division series last year. His career numbers against the Dodgers: a .235 batting average and .712 OPS.

Tech support: Instead of answering questions about San Francisco’s dreary season, manager Bruce Bochy picked up his phone and, according to the San Jose Mercury News, asked a question of his own. “Siri,” he said. “How many three-run homers have we given up this season?” At that point, the answer was 19. The Giants had hit five. They rank last in the majors in home runs. The Giants have no power, a weak outfield and money to burn from developing the real estate around AT&T Park, so it’s little wonder they’re extremely interested if Derek Jeter and the Miami Marlins dare to trade Giancarlo Stanton.

Royal flush: The Kansas City Royals did not score for 45 consecutiv­e innings, the longest scoreless streak by a major league team in 49 years. They became the first American League team to be shut out in four consecutiv­e games since the designated hitter rule was adopted in 1973. And the scoreless streak may not have been the worst part of Kansas City’s week. Pitcher Danny Duffy, whom the Royals signed to a $65-million contract extension eight months ago, was cited for driving under the influence when he reportedly fell asleep in the drivethrou­gh lane at Burger King.

 ?? Stephen Brashear Getty Images ?? MIKE LEAKE joins Mariners via trade, putting Seattle on the hook for $39 million over three years.
Stephen Brashear Getty Images MIKE LEAKE joins Mariners via trade, putting Seattle on the hook for $39 million over three years.
 ?? Nick Wass Associated Press ?? BRYCE HARPER might not be available for Washington in the playoffs because of a knee injury.
Nick Wass Associated Press BRYCE HARPER might not be available for Washington in the playoffs because of a knee injury.

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