Bryce Harper leaves Phillies-Braves game after taking fastball to elbow; X-rays come up negative

Bryce Harper left Tuesday’s game against the Braves after being hit by a pitch. (Photo by Geoff Stellfox/Getty Images)
Geoff Stellfox via Getty Images

Bryce Harper left Tuesday’s game between the Philadelphia Phillies and Atlanta Braves after being hit on his right elbow with a pitch. 

Per the TV broadcast, the Phillies announced that X-rays on Harper’s elbow from the Phillies clubhouse were negative. The initial diagnosis was of a contusion.

The incident took place in the bottom of the first inning. Braves starter Spencer Strider threw a 95 mph fastball inside on an 0-1 count that hit Harper on his elbow. Harper immediately clutched his elbow and eventually knelt to the ground in pain. 

The hit was to the same elbow that required Tommy John surgery in 2022. 

Edmundo Sosa took Harper’s place on the basepaths after Harper was awarded first base. It’s not immediately clear how much more time if any that Harper will miss or if he’ll require further evaluation of the injury. 

Harper, 32, is an eight-time All-Star and two-time NL MVP. He won the fourth Silver Slugger of his career last season and received MVP votes. In 53 games this season, Harper is slashing .267/.372/.450 with eight home runs, 33 RBI and eight stolen bases. 

The Phillies entered Tuesday’s game in first place in the NL East with a 1.5-game lead over the New York Mets. Their 34-19 record entering Tuesday was the best in MLB.

Harper is obviously key to Philadelphia’s hopes of competing for a World Series championship this season. 

Mets down Dodgers, look for more wins, and an interview with pitching prospect Matt Allan | The Mets Pod

On the latest episode of The Mets Pod presented by Tri-State Cadillac, Connor Rogers and Joe DeMayo look back on a week of winning without much hitting, and also chat with pitching prospect Matt Allan about his long road back to the mound.

First up, the guys cover the dramatic series win over the Dodgers, the continued struggles of Juan Soto, the emergence of Brett Baty, and the balancing act between playing both Francisco Alvarez and Luis Torrens behind the plate.

Then, Joe catches up with prospect Matt Allan, who shares his story of a road back from multiple surgeries, and also talks about the changes he’s seen in the Mets organization, and what he’s now seeing from himself in Brooklyn and what could still be ahead for him in 2025.

Later, Connor and Joe answer mailbag questions about Jett Williams, Ryan Clifford, narratives around Juan Soto, and the overall issues of the offense.

Be sure to subscribe to The Mets Pod at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

Thunder have T-Wolves on the brink, growing pains for Anthony Edwards and pivotal Game 4 between Knicks-Pacers

On this episode of Good Word with Goodwill, Vince and James Edwards react to the Oklahoma City Thunder taking a commanding 3-1 lead against the Minnesota Timberwolves in the Western Conference Finals.

Next, Vince and James agree that the Thunder have a “Big 3” and unpack Anthony Edwards’ growing up in real time throughout this series.

Later, Vince and James take a look at the pivotal Game 4 between the New York Knicks and the Indiana Pacers and dissect the dialogue around Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Brunson being foul merchants.

(1:37) Thunder take commanding 3-1 lead against Timberwolves

(9:29) Thunder have a homegrown Big 3

(18:58) Anthony Edwards and the growing pains of being a young star

(26:42) Did Knicks find something repeatable for Game 4?

(34:44) Is Game 4 a must-win for Pacers?

(43:25) Should the NBA get rid of the take foul?

(44:57) Foul merchant NBA Finals?

Jalen Williams scored 34 points including 14 in the fourth quarter to help Thunder take commanding 3-1 lead over Timberwolves. (AP Photo/Nate Billings)
(AP Photo/Nate Billings)

🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at Yahoo Sports Podcasts

Thunder have T-Wolves on the brink, growing pains for Anthony Edwards and pivotal Game 4 between Knicks-Pacers

On this episode of Good Word with Goodwill, Vince and James Edwards react to the Oklahoma City Thunder taking a commanding 3-1 lead against the Minnesota Timberwolves in the Western Conference Finals.

Next, Vince and James agree that the Thunder have a “Big 3” and unpack Anthony Edwards’ growing up in real time throughout this series.

Later, Vince and James take a look at the pivotal Game 4 between the New York Knicks and the Indiana Pacers and dissect the dialogue around Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Brunson being foul merchants.

(1:37) Thunder take commanding 3-1 lead against Timberwolves

(9:29) Thunder have a homegrown Big 3

(18:58) Anthony Edwards and the growing pains of being a young star

(26:42) Did Knicks find something repeatable for Game 4?

(34:44) Is Game 4 a must-win for Pacers?

(43:25) Should the NBA get rid of the take foul?

(44:57) Foul merchant NBA Finals?

Jalen Williams scored 34 points including 14 in the fourth quarter to help Thunder take commanding 3-1 lead over Timberwolves. (AP Photo/Nate Billings)
(AP Photo/Nate Billings)

🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at Yahoo Sports Podcasts

Knicks vs. Pacers: Aaron Nesmith available for Game 4 after ankle sprain

Aaron Nesmith is good to go after all. 

The Indiana Pacers forward is available to play in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals on Tuesday night, the team announced just a few hours before the game was set to tip. Nesmith had been considered a game-time decision after he rolled his right ankle in Sunday’s Game 3 loss to the New York Knicks.

Nesmith went down with the injury midway through the third quarter Sunday after he came down awkwardly under the basket while trying to make a pass. He crashed down to the floor and reached for his right ankle immediately, clearly in a lot of pain. 

He was then helped off the floor and went back to the locker room. He eventually came back into the game, but he missed all three shots he took down the stretch and failed to stop Knicks star Jalen Brunson from hitting a critical bucket.

“Aaron is sore today, predictably,” Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle said Monday, adding he’d be a “game-time decision” for Game 4. 

While Nesmith is likely still feeling the impacts of his rolled ankle, it’s clearly not severe enough to keep him off the floor. 

Nesmith, now in his third season with the Pacers, averaged 12 points and four rebounds per game during the regular season. He dropped 30 points in the Pacers’ wild Game 1 win in overtime over New York, and he’s averaged 16.7 points per game so far this series with the Knicks. The 25-year-old signed a three-year, $33 million extension with the team in 2023 that will keep him with the franchise through the 2026-27 campaign.

The Pacers hold a 2-1 series lead over the Knicks headed into Tuesday night’s contest in Indianapolis. The Pacers, now back in the Eastern Conference finals for a second straight season, have not made it to the NBA Finals since 2000.

Knicks vs. Pacers: Aaron Nesmith available for Game 4 after ankle sprain

Aaron Nesmith is good to go after all. 

The Indiana Pacers forward is available to play in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals on Tuesday night, the team announced just a few hours before the game was set to tip. Nesmith had been considered a game-time decision after he rolled his right ankle in Sunday’s Game 3 loss to the New York Knicks.

Nesmith went down with the injury midway through the third quarter Sunday after he came down awkwardly under the basket while trying to make a pass. He crashed down to the floor and reached for his right ankle immediately, clearly in a lot of pain. 

He was then helped off the floor and went back to the locker room. He eventually came back into the game, but he missed all three shots he took down the stretch and failed to stop Knicks star Jalen Brunson from hitting a critical bucket.

“Aaron is sore today, predictably,” Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle said Monday, adding he’d be a “game-time decision” for Game 4. 

While Nesmith is likely still feeling the impacts of his rolled ankle, it’s clearly not severe enough to keep him off the floor. 

Nesmith, now in his third season with the Pacers, averaged 12 points and four rebounds per game during the regular season. He dropped 30 points in the Pacers’ wild Game 1 win in overtime over New York, and he’s averaged 16.7 points per game so far this series with the Knicks. The 25-year-old signed a three-year, $33 million extension with the team in 2023 that will keep him with the franchise through the 2026-27 campaign.

The Pacers hold a 2-1 series lead over the Knicks headed into Tuesday night’s contest in Indianapolis. The Pacers, now back in the Eastern Conference finals for a second straight season, have not made it to the NBA Finals since 2000.

Wednesday’s Mets-White Sox series finale bumped up to 1:10 p.m. due to weather

Wednesday’s series finale between the Mets and White Sox has been bumped up due to weather.

First pitch at Citi Field was originally scheduled for 7:10 p.m. but with showers expected in the area throughout the night, they game will now begin at 1:10 p.m. instead.

Gates will open at 12:10 p.m. now and parking lots will open at 11:40 a.m.

Griffin Canning (5-1, 2.88 ERA) is lined up to take the ball against right-hander Shane Smith (1-3, 2.36 ERA), a Rule 5 pick who has been spectacular thus far this season.

New York took the opening game of the set on Monday afternoon, rallying to score two runs in the eighth and ninth, walking it off on a Francisco Lindor sacrifice fly.

Tylor Megill faces off with Jonathan Cannon in the middle game on Tuesday night on SNY.

Mets Notes: Carlos Mendoza on Jared Young’s DH opportunities, Luisangel Acuña’s impact off the bench

The Mets are officially at the one-third mark of the 2025 season, and Tuesday night’s matchup with the Chicago White Sox will be the official start of the “middle” of the team’s regular season.

Prior to Tuesday’s first pitch, Mets manager Carlos Mendoza discussed some of his recent lineup decisions, as well as what makes Luisangel Acuña so valuable even on days when he’s not part of the starting nine.

Here’s what Mendoza had to say…

OnJared Young starting again at DH

Called up from Triple-A Syracuse on Saturday, Young will be making his fourth start as the Mets’ designated hitter on Tuesday night, hitting sixth against Chicago righty Jonathan Cannon.

Asked about Young, Mendoza cited the 29-year-old’s ability to put himself in good hitter’s counts, with the Mets hoping to see him capitalize on those opportunities as he gets more chances.

“We’ve seen it these past couple of days,” Mendoza said. “He’s got the ability to put himself in a good hitter’s count and that’s his calling card. He hit a 107 (MPH) to dead center the other day and I feel like he’s usually 2-0, 3-1. Now he’s just got to get into the rhythm and do some damage on some pitches.”

Young is 0-for-5 with a hit-by-pitch and a run scored in three games since his call-up.

Acuña’s veteran mindset paying dividends

Acuña is not in Tuesday’s lineup, as Brett Baty gets the start at second with Mark Vientos at third.

But the youngster has proven that he doesn’t need to start a game to have an impact, as evidenced by his last three games, entering the game in the seventh inning or later each time while stealing a bag on Sunday and scoring the tying run on Monday as a pinch-runner.

“This is a guy that doesn’t get too high, doesn’t get too low,” Mendoza said. “Pretty mature for his age and he has a really good understanding of his role right now and the impact that he brings to the team. He knows that even though he’s not in the lineup, there’s going to be an opportunity for him to come in and impact it in a good game, whether it’s by making a defensive play, by stealing a base, by scoring from first base on a ball in the gap, or by giving us a good at-bat, putting the ball in play. I think he obviously continues to develop. There’s a lot of tools there, but I like how he’s handled it so far mentally.”

On giving Mark Vientos more opportunities at third base

It’s undoubtedly been a rough start to the season for Vientos, who is hitting just .234 and has also struggled defensively, committing seven errors in 39 games at the hot corner, including four errors since the calendar flipped to May.

Since being called back up, Brett Baty has gotten the majority of the playing time at third base, with Vientos serving as the DH in eight of his last 14 appearances.

But Vientos will be at third on Tuesday night, and according to Mendoza, giving the 25-year-old more reps there is the only way to help him out of his defensive funk.

“For me, he’s just going through it right now,” Mendoza said. “It was really good to see him yesterday continue to put in the work. That’s how you’re going to get out of it. It’s like when you’re going through struggles offensively. You go out there and continue to work until you get the feeling back. Same thing.

“This is a guy that in the offseason worked really, really hard [on] his first step. And now he’s going through a stretch where it happens. But continue to work, continue to believe in yourself. We’re going to continue to give him chances. Here he is playing third base again. He’ll get through it, he’ll be fine, he’s a really good third baseman.”