Brandon SPROAT And Edwin Diaz I was approached for two points each, and the bats of the food were held in check in a defeat of 5-1 against the Astros of Houston Thursday evening in Port St. Lucie.
Here are take -out dishes …
– SPROAT made a first round race when Jon Singleton Throw the ball into the central field of the end of its bat (output speed of 74.7 MPH) for a simple RBI twice which fell in front Jose Siri in the center.
The young right -hander allowed another simple with smooth contact to start the second, but Francisco Alvarez Should be the barrel Quincy Hamilton Trying to fly second. This outing was sandwiched between SPROAT by counting a pair of stick withdrawals, on a cutter and a quick swing. But his night ended in the third when he was chased by a walk and a single suddenly affected to the right to cover the corners with anyone.
SPROAT, who was part of the dozen players sent to the minor leagues camp this week, was prohibited for two points on four strokes and a two -round walking on 35 throws (23 strikes). He used his lead (16 locations) and his quick ball (10) and generated eight called and his buffoons on these two, the radiator seated between 94.1 and 97.7 MPH.
– Diaz made a five -step walk to start the third. The closest, during its beginnings in training in the spring, launched bullets on its first five fast balls before finally obtaining a strike on land that saw Chas McCormick Fly second without throwing.
McCormick took off for the third with a withdrawal and Diaz missed the five -foot cursor on a land that hit reached the net. On the following whole, Brendan Rodgers Fleur a suspended cursor (107.7 MPH) which seduced the wall on the left for a double. Jacob Melton Then struck the next step (108.4 MPH) for a simple right that marked a race like Juan SotoThe throw was not manipulated by Alvarez on the plate.
After Melton slipped second, Diaz recovered to get Luis Guillorme to go out on the left shallow, but Francisco Lindor Called and failed to find the contextual window drifting for an error. This ended the night of Diaz: allowing two points on two safe with a walk by launching 10 strikes on 19 throws (14 fast balls, five cursors) with wild land and recording only one. The radiator was between 94.2 and 96.9 MPH, but eight were out of the area.
– Mark Venos Broken a shot of two strokes on the hole in short when Guillorme made a diving stop but could not launch. He pulled a cursor at the end of the bat for a simple left in the third. Venos continued the right night to take a lead in restraint in the right field for his third sure night of the night to put two and no one in the fifth.
In the warm corner, Venos made a nice game aligning a good rebound to start a double game of 5-3, a striker after having slightly distorted a jump on a hot lining (108.2 MPH) which hit the heel of its glove.
– Lindor fell behind 0-2 his first time before taking a walk. He put a ball his second time (101.5 MPH) but offered a 376 -foot flyout in the base stadium of Port St. Lucie. (Statcast gave him an .630 XBA.) Lindor put the food on the board with a shot that opted for a single RBI when the third basic player Smith Cam Smith OlĂ©’d it.
– Soto struck a hard group his first At-Bat but was deprived suddenly by a diving game in second position. After walking on four lands in the third, Soto faced Houston Lefty hard Josh Hader, But a group of 101.6 MPH in the middle was tilted by a sliding guillorme (steering wheel an .530 XBA) to finish the fourth.
During a bitter night, Soto was mistaken when a hot shot (100.8 MPH) came to him in the right field, and while he retired on the warning track, the ball launched his glove while he reached his back over his head. He opted for a double RBI.
– Alvarez made a walk his first time, but withdrew a half-swing on a breaking field to leave the base loaded in the third. The recipient went down again on a cursor (this time, it was above the plate) with two men in fifth to finish.
– Pete Alonso I went to swing in the first on a high radiator and in the third on a slow sweeper in the area after a long battle. But he took the first throw he saw in fifth to center a rocket of a simple in the middle (108.9 MPH) to finish 1 for 3.
– Jesse Winker Tapped in the first to break a pair in the first. After late 0-2, he worked to load the bases in the third. The DH had another chance with the men on the basis without anyone in the fifth, but struck by looking at a slow cursor.
– Jeff McNeil Hit a durblass (97.6 MPH) its first time, but left with a flight to the center. He finished 0 for 2 with a walk and a removal with the stick.
MVP game: Mark Venos
The third basic player was the only bright point for the food when he went 3-in-3 with three pieces of good strike.
Strengths
Upcoming calendar
The dishes go to West Palm Beach to face the Nationals of Washington for a first throw of 6:05 p.m. Friday.