Yankees Injury Notes: Luis Gil throws first bullpen session, Jazz Chisholm Jr. close to return

Prior to the start of their three-game series against the Dodgers in Los Angeles, Yankees manager Aaron Boone gave updates on a few players who are making their way back to the team…


Luis Gil’s first bullpen session

Boone gave an encouraging update on 2024 AL Rookie of the Year, Luis Gil on Friday. The young right-hander threw a 15-pitch bullpen at Dodger Stadium and everything went well, according to the Yankees skipper.

It’s the first time Gil has thrown off a mound since late February when he suffered a right lat strain during spring training.

Gil’s return would boost the Yankees rotation which has weathered the season-ending injury to ace Gerrit Cole. Last season, the 26-year-old went 16-8 while pitching to a 3.55 ERA and 1.23 WHIP. Once Gil returns, the Yankees will have to decide whether they will go with a six-man rotation or put Ryan Yarbrough back into the bullpen as the team’s long reliever.

Rehab plan for Jazz Chisholm Jr.

Chisholm Jr. is currently playing third base with the Somerset Patriots and Boone wants his infielder to play another minor league game on Saturday while starting at DH on Sunday. Boone said Jazz could return as soon as Tuesday, where he’ll play third base when he does.

Fernando Cruz update

Cruz (shoulder) will throw a live BP on Saturday and if that goes well, he’ll likely be activated when he’s eligible next week.

Cruz has been one of the Yankees’ best relievers this season. He pitched to a 2.66 ERA and a 0.97 WHIP in his 21 appearances and has saved two games. He’s struck out 35 batters in only 23.2 innings pitched this season.

Dodgers reliever Evan Phillips to undergo season-ending Tommy John surgery

Dodgers pitcher Evan Phillips delivers against the Pittsburgh Pirates on April 26. Phillips will undergo season-ending Tommy John surgery on June 4, Dave Roberts said. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Dodgers reliever Evan Phillips is scheduled to get Tommy John surgery next week and will miss the rest of the season, manager Dave Roberts announced Friday.

Phillips had missed the last three weeks because of forearm discomfort — and had not progressed in his recovery despite initial optimism that he would only miss the minimum 15 days on the injured list.

Phillips, 30, started this season in the IL while recovering from a partially torn rotator cuff he suffered in last year’s postseason.

He returned in late April and made seven scoreless appearances before getting hurt during the Dodgers‘ trip to Miami earlier this month.

Read more:Shaikin: ‘Another log on the fire.’ Yankees eager to avenge World Series meltdown against Dodgers

Betts out with toe injury

Shortstop Mookie Betts was not in the team’s lineup for Friday’s series opener against the New York Yankees because of a toe injury.

According to Roberts, Betts stubbed his toe after the team returned from this week’s trip on Wednesday. He was initially expected to play Friday, but had trouble putting on his cleats before the game.

Betts will get an X-ray, Roberts said, and is considered day-to-day.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Trout returns to Angels’ lineup in a new spot after being activated off the injured list

CLEVELAND — Mike Trout originally expected to return to the Los Angeles Angels’ lineup on Monday in Boston.

It turns out the timeline was moved up one series and three days.

Trout was activated off the injured list before Friday night’s game against the Cleveland Guardians. The Angels slugger missed 26 games with soreness in his left knee eventually diagnosed as a bone bruise. The three-time American League MVP had two operations last year on the knee after tearing his meniscus.

“I’m just itching to get out there,” Trout said before the game. “I think came out of the other day (of running bases) good. I wasn’t too sore or anything, I told them I was good enough to go out there and have some good at-bats.”

Trout’s return comes with something he hasn’t done in his 15-year big league career. This will be the first time in 1,532 starts that he will be hitting fifth in the lineup.

The only other time Trout batted fifth in 1,547 previous games was on May 14, 2022, against the Athletics, when he entered in the fourth inning and finished the game in center field.

“We know where Mike Trout is in the order. It doesn’t matter where he is hitting, he could be hitting ninth,” Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said. “It’s got to be a different feeling for sure for them. I mean, he’s been in the two or three hole for what, 12 years now? But he’s still a really good player.”

Manager Ron Washington is happy to have Trout back, especially since he noted Trout wasn’t aggressive in rushing back. Washington also knows that Trout isn’t ready to return to his normal spot batting second or third.

“He hasn’t seen anything. So when you look at what we have, that’s where he sits,” Washington said. “It doesn’t make sense for him to protect (Logan) O’Hoppe. So I’ll put Mike behind him to protect O’Hoppe. He’s not ready to be at the top of the lineup, especially with those guys up there. As we go along the next couple of days, he’s not going to remain fifth.”

The 33-year old Trout was hitting .179 with nine home runs, 18 RBIs and a .727 OPS in 29 games before the injury. He will be the designated hitter for the weekend series against the Guardians before possibly returning to right field when the Halos head to Boston on Monday for a three-game series.

Even though Trout has shied away from wanting to be the designated hitter, he has done well in that spot. In seven games this season, he is 8 for 28 (.286) with six home runs and nine RBIs.

Trout said whether or not he plays more games than originally planned at DH the remainder of the season is something that remains to be seen.

“Bone bruises are tricky. I know I am going to be sore but I can deal with it,” he said. “I definitely have to be cautious, especially the first couple games.”

Trout’s return comes with the Angels on a five-game skid after an eight-game winning streak that included a three-game sweep of the defending World Series champion Dodgers. Los Angeles were 25-30 going into Friday’s game.

“There’s so many games that any sense of newness or something to make you excited is something that you’d latch on to. So today is definitely a moment like that,” O’Hoppe said about Trout’s return. “He’s the heart of this organization. So we’re happy to have our heart beating again for sure.”

Trout has missed 404 of the Angels’ 664 games – almost 61% – since May 17, 2021, when he tore his calf muscle against Cleveland and was sidelined for the rest of that season. This is the fifth straight year he has had a stint of at least 25 games on the IL.

He missed five weeks of the 2022 season with a back injury, and all but one game after July 3 in 2023 after he broke a bone in his hand on a foul ball. Trout played in 29 games last season before the meniscus injury.

Tigers pitcher Jackson Jobe goes to IL with Grade 1 flexor tendon strain in right elbow

The Detroit Tigers go into Friday’s schedule of games still holding the best record in MLB at 37-20, a half-game better than the Philadelphia Phillies. Yet maintaining that top spot could be tenuous with starting pitching injuries accumulating.

Pitcher Jackson Jobe is going on the injured list with a Grade 1 strain of the flexor tendon in his right elbow, the team announced Friday. Though he was placed on the 15-day IL, it appears likely that the rookie will be out for a longer period. 

Jobe, 22, will be shut down from throwing while the inflammation in his elbow and forearm subside. He then will have to go through a rehab period before being allowed to restart a throwing program, according to the Detroit News. A two-month recovery for this type of injury is typical.

As a point of comparison, Seattle Mariners pitcher Logan Gilbert went on the IL with the same injury on April 25 and just began a minor league rehab assignment this week. 

Jobe allowed three runs on seven hits and three walks in his last start Wednesday. Leaving the game after 4 2/3 innings, he said he felt soreness and the Tigers moved to get him tested quickly. Detroit manager A.J. Hinch said nothing looked out of the ordinary until Jobe said he didn’t feel right. 

Jobe’s velocity was down by 1.5 mph, the Detroit Free Press reported. And after his previous start on May 23 versus the Cleveland Guardians, Jobe said he was “not the best I’ve felt physically all year,” which he attributed to pitching his first full major league season. 

In 10 starts this season, Jobe compiled a 4.22 ERA and 4-1 record with 39 strikeouts in 49 innings. He was frustrated by the lower strikeout rate, according to MLB.com, compared to the 10.1 Ks per 9 innings he registered in the minors. He was the Tigers’ first-round pick (No. 3 overall) in the 2021 MLB Draft out of Heritage Hall School in Oklahoma City. 

Jobe became the third Detroit starting pitcher placed on the IL during May, joining Reese Olson. Casey Mize just returned from the IL last week and allowed one earned run in five innings versus the Cleveland Guardians. He’s scheduled to start Friday against the Kansas City Royals.

Besides the uncertainty over Jobe’s return, the question for the Tigers is who will take his spot in the rotation. Reliever Dylan Smith was called up from Triple-A Toledo to fill Jobe’s roster spot. In 14 appearances, he has a 1.61 ERA with 32 strikeouts in 22 1/3 inings. 

Thus, Hinch may opt for using his bullpen when Jobe’s turn comes up or Sawyer Gipson-Long (returning from right elbow and left hip surgeries) will get the call-up

Tigers pitcher Jackson Jobe goes to IL with Grade 1 flexor tendon strain in right elbow

The Detroit Tigers go into Friday’s schedule of games still holding the best record in MLB at 37-20, a half-game better than the Philadelphia Phillies. Yet maintaining that top spot could be tenuous with starting pitching injuries accumulating.

Pitcher Jackson Jobe is going on the injured list with a Grade 1 strain of the flexor tendon in his right elbow, the team announced Friday. Though he was placed on the 15-day IL, it appears likely that the rookie will be out for a longer period. 

Jobe, 22, will be shut down from throwing while the inflammation in his elbow and forearm subside. He then will have to go through a rehab period before being allowed to restart a throwing program, according to the Detroit News. A two-month recovery for this type of injury is typical.

As a point of comparison, Seattle Mariners pitcher Logan Gilbert went on the IL with the same injury on April 25 and just began a minor league rehab assignment this week. 

Jobe allowed three runs on seven hits and three walks in his last start Wednesday. Leaving the game after 4 2/3 innings, he said he felt soreness and the Tigers moved to get him tested quickly. Detroit manager A.J. Hinch said nothing looked out of the ordinary until Jobe said he didn’t feel right. 

Jobe’s velocity was down by 1.5 mph, the Detroit Free Press reported. And after his previous start on May 23 versus the Cleveland Guardians, Jobe said he was “not the best I’ve felt physically all year,” which he attributed to pitching his first full major league season. 

In 10 starts this season, Jobe compiled a 4.22 ERA and 4-1 record with 39 strikeouts in 49 innings. He was frustrated by the lower strikeout rate, according to MLB.com, compared to the 10.1 Ks per 9 innings he registered in the minors. He was the Tigers’ first-round pick (No. 3 overall) in the 2021 MLB Draft out of Heritage Hall School in Oklahoma City. 

Jobe became the third Detroit starting pitcher placed on the IL during May, joining Reese Olson. Casey Mize just returned from the IL last week and allowed one earned run in five innings versus the Cleveland Guardians. He’s scheduled to start Friday against the Kansas City Royals.

Besides the uncertainty over Jobe’s return, the question for the Tigers is who will take his spot in the rotation. Reliever Dylan Smith was called up from Triple-A Toledo to fill Jobe’s roster spot. In 14 appearances, he has a 1.61 ERA with 32 strikeouts in 22 1/3 inings. 

Thus, Hinch may opt for using his bullpen when Jobe’s turn comes up or Sawyer Gipson-Long (returning from right elbow and left hip surgeries) will get the call-up

Lance McCullers gets 24-hour security after online death threats, some aimed at 5-year-old daughter

May 16, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Houston Astros starting pitcher Lance McCullers Jr. (43) comes off the field after pitching against the Texas Rangers during the fourth inning at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

HOUSTON — Soon after Lance McCullers Jr.’s family received online death threats following a tough start by the Houston Astros’ pitcher, his 5-year-old daughter, Ava, overheard wife Kara talking on the phone about it.

What followed was a painful conversation between McCullers and his little girl.

“She asked me when I came home: ‘Daddy like what is threats? Who wants to hurt us? Who wants to hurt me?’” McCullers told The Associated Press on Wednesday. “So, those conversations are tough to deal with.”

McCullers is one of two MLB pitchers whose families have received online death threats this month as internet abuse of players and their families is on the rise. Boston reliever Liam Hendriks took to social media soon after the incident with McCullers to call out people who were threatening his wife’s life and directing “vile” comments at him.

The Astros contacted MLB security and the Houston Police Department following the threats to McCullers. An police spokesperson said Thursday that it remains an ongoing investigation.

McCullers, who has two young daughters, took immediate action after the threats and reached out to the team to inquire about what could be done to protect his family. Astros owner Jim Crane stepped in and hired 24-hour security for them.

It was a move McCullers felt was necessary after what happened.

“You have to at that point,” he said.

Players from around the league agree that online abuse has gotten progressively worse in recent years. Milwaukee’s Christian Yelich, a 13-year MLB veteran and the 2018 NL MVP, said receiving online abuse is “a nightly thing” for most players.

“I think over the last few years it’s definitely increased,” he said. “It’s increased to the point that you’re just: ‘All right, here we go.’ It doesn’t even really register on your radar anymore. I don’t know if that’s a good or a bad thing. You’re just so used to that on a day-to-day, night-to-night basis. It’s not just me. It’s everybody in here, based on performance.”

And many players believe it’s directly linked to the rise in legalized sports betting.

“You get a lot of DMs or stuff like that about you ruining someone’s bet or something ridiculous like that,” veteran Red Sox reliever Justin Wilson said. “I guess they should make better bets.”

Hendriks, a 36-year-old reliever who previously battled non-Hodgkin lymphoma, said on Instagram that he and his wife received death threats after a loss to the Mets. He added that people left comments saying that they wished he would have died from cancer among other abusive comments.

He later discussed the issue and his decision to speak out about it.

“Enough is enough,” he said. “Like at some point, everyone just like sucking up and dealing with it isn’t accomplishing anything. And we pass along to security. We pass along to whoever we need to, but nothing ends up happening. And it happens again the next night. And so, at some point, someone has to make a stand. And it’s one of those things where the more eyes we get on it, the more voices we get talking about it. Hopefully it can push it in the right direction.”

Both the Astros and the Red Sox are working with MLB security to take action against social media users who direct threats toward players and their families. Red Sox spokesperson Abby Murphy added that they’ve taken steps in recent years to make sure player’ families are safe during games. That includes security staff and Boston police stationed in the family section at home and dedicated security in the traveling party to monitor the family section on the road.

Murphy said identifying those who make anonymous threats online is difficult, but: “both the Red Sox and MLB have cyber programs and analysts dedicated to identifying and removing these accounts.”

The Astros have uniformed police officers stationed in the family section, a practice that was implemented well before the threats to McCullers and his family.

For some players, online abuse has gotten so bad that they’ve abandoned social media. Detroit All-Star outfielder Riley Greene is one of them, saying he got off because he received so many messages from people blaming him for failed bets.

“I deleted it,” he said of Instagram. “I’m off it. It sucks, but it’s the world we live in, and we can’t do anything about it. People would DM me and say nasty things, tell me how bad of a player I am, and say nasty stuff that we don’t want to hear.”

The 31-year-old McCullers, who returned this year after missing two full seasons with injuries, said dealing with this has been the worst thing that’s happened in his career. He understands the passion of fans and knows that being criticized for a poor performance is part of the game. But he believes there’s a “moral line” that fans shouldn’t cross.

“People should want us to succeed,” he said. “We want to succeed, but it shouldn’t come at a cost to our families, the kids in our life, having to feel like they’re not safe where they live or where they sit at games.”

Houston manager Joe Espada was livid when he learned about the threats to McCullers and his family and was visibly upset when he addressed what happened with reporters.

Espada added that the team has mental health professionals available to the players to talk about the toll such abuse takes on them and any other issues they may be dealing with.

“We are aware that when we step on the field, fans expect and we expect the best out of ourselves,” Espada said this week. “But when we are trying to do our best and things don’t go our way while we’re trying to give you everything we got and now you’re threatening our families and kids – now I do have a big issue with that, right? I just did not like it.”

Kansas City’s Salvador Perez, a 14-year MLB veteran, hasn’t experienced online abuse but was appalled by what happened to McCullers. If something like that happened to him he said it would change the way he interacts with fans.

“Now some fans, real fans, they’re gonna pay for that, too,” he said. “Because if I was him, I wouldn’t take a picture or sign anything for noboby because of that one day.”

McCullers wouldn’t go that far but admitted it has changed his mindset.

“It does make you kind of shell up a little bit,” he said. “It does make you kind of not want to go places. I guess that’s just probably the human reaction to it.”

While most players have dealt with some level of online abuse in their careers, no one has a good idea of how to stop it.

“I’m thankful I’m not in a position where I have to find a solution to this,” Tigers’ pitcher Tyler Holton said. “But as a person who is involved in this, I wish this wasn’t a topic of conversation.”

White Sox outfielder Mike Tauchman is disheartened at how bad player abuse has gotten. While it’s mostly online, he added that he’s had teammates that have had racist and homophobic things yelled at them during games.

“Outside of just simply not having social media I really don’t see that getting better before it just continues to get worse,” he said. “I mean, I think it’s kind of the way things are now. Like, people just feel like they have the right to say whatever they want to whoever they want and it’s behind a keyboard and there’s really no repercussions, right?”

AP Baseball Writer Mike Fitzpatrick and AP Sports Writers Jimmy Golen, Kyle Hightower, Larry Lage and Steve Megargee contributed to this report.

Mets’ Carlos Mendoza, David Stearns contextualize Francisco Alvarez’s struggles; Ronny Mauricio ‘hitting lasers’

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza and president of baseball operations David Stearns held media availabilities before Friday’s 7:10 p.m. game against the Colorado Rockies on SNY. In addition to injury updates, there were comments on catcher Francisco Alvarez‘s 2025 season struggles, infielder Ronny Mauricio‘s hot Triple-A start and the MLB trade deadline.

Francisco Alvarez will ‘continue to get opportunities’

After Luis Torrens started Wednesday’s 9-4 loss to the Chicago White Sox, Alvarez returns to the lineup in the eighth spot and enters Friday slashing .243/.341/.311 with one home run and seven RBI through 22 games.

“We saw he was having a hard time against velo, but I’m going to continue to say we need him and I’m going to continue to give him chances,” Mendoza said. “Yeah, Luis is playing well. But Alvy is a really good player, too.

“So, whether it’s lefties, righties, he’s going to continue to get opportunities and he’s in there today.”

The Mets activated Alvarez on April 25 from the 10-day injured list, where he was placed on March 27 due to his hamate fracture. Alvarez returned to the Mets after a rehab assignment that started April 9 with Low-A St. Lucie before progressing to Double-A Binghamton and Triple-A Syracuse.

“A player who made a very significant swing change in the offseason, lost all of spring training — or almost all of spring training — got off to a late start and has probably been fighting himself to this point,” Stearns said. “I think he hasn’t produced at the level he’s accustomed to producing.

“He’s working really hard to continue to refine his swing, to get it to a place that he feels really comfortable with, and I think we all would expect that we’re going to see better production going forward than what we’ve seen in his relatively brief stint since he’s come off the IL.”

Ronny Mauricio ‘hitting lasers’

Through seven games with Triple-A Syracuse, Mauricio is slashing .560/.586/.960 with three home runs and seven RBI.

What does Mauricio, who missed the 2024 season with a torn right ACL before starting this year with St. Lucie and Syracuse, have to do for a look?

“He’s doing a great job,” Stearns said. “No. 1 is health and getting him back and building up the volume, and we’re continuing to do that. But any time you see players consistently hitting lasers all over the field, which is what he’s doing right now in Triple-A, you pay attention. We’re paying attention and we’ll continue to monitor that and see where it goes.”

“I think we’re most focused on him getting the reps under him, getting the volume, hopefully continuing to swing a really hot bat,” Stearns added. “Once we get to that point, he gives us something to think about.”

2025 MLB trade deadline

July 31 at 6 p.m. is still two months away, but moves are already being made. This week, the Cincinnati Reds traded 2023 All-Star reliever Alexis Diaz, Edwin Diaz‘s brother, to the Los Angeles Dodgers.

With a good chunk of the big leagues appearing to be unlikely for postseason contention, Stearns was asked about his thoughts on whether the trade deadline could move earlier than normal.

“I haven’t seen anything yet or heard anything yet that makes me suggest that’s going to be an unusually early period, but that can certainly change if one club decides that they want to engage early and could spur action,” he said. “But to this point, it certainly seems that that’s going to be a little bit more of a traditional, later-in-the-process-type deadline.”

No One Is Buying Phones for AI

If you’re entrenched in tech news, you’d think Apple was on the brink of collapse. The company undoubtedly is having a rough go of all things AI—while companies like ChatGPT, Google, and Microsoft have hit the AI ground running, Apple’s AI department is in disarray. Some features, like Clean Up and Writing Tools, have made their way to products like the iPhone, but, others (notably Siri’s AI overhaul) are still nowhere to be seen.

The situation is, objectively, not great. Apple advertised these features alongside the iPhone 16 line, even casting The Last of Us’ Bella Ramsey in a commercial showing off said AI-powered Siri. (The commercial has since been deleted.) While the rest of the tech industry seems to be entirely focused on AI, Apple is, uncharacteristically, struggling to keep up. Things must be dire for the company, right?

The iPhone continues to sell like hot cakes

While I’m not here to read the company’s entire pulse, it does seem like the iPhone department is still crushing it. On Wednesday, market research firm Counterpoint released its list of the top-selling smartphones in Q1 of 2025. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the iPhone topped the list: Apple’s iPhone 16 was the best-selling smartphone in the world in the first fiscal quarter of this year, followed by the 16 Pro Max, 16 Pro, and iPhone 15. Apple also had the top four spots in the first quarter of 2024—back then, it was the 15 Pro Max in first place, followed by the 15, 15 Pro, and 14.

Samsung took the next three spots, as it did in Q1 of 2024 as well. This year, it was the Galaxy A16 5G in fifth place, followed by the Galaxy A06 and the Galaxy S25 Ultra. The Redmi 14C 4G came in eighth—impressive for a smartphone that isn’t even sold in the U.S.—followed by the Galaxy A55 5G, and, finally, the iPhone 16 Plus.

There’s a lot you can take away from the data here. The first impression is that the iPhone continues to be a global force to be reckoned with. The iPhone had five of the top 10 spots in both Q1 2024 and 2025—the only difference between them was the iPhone 15 Plus came in eighth place, while the 16 Plus came in 10th. Samsung, too, is clearly still a reigning champ in the global smartphone race, though it went from five phones in the top 10 to four between those two years—good for Redmi for stealing that eighth place spot.

Ecosystems are powerful things

It’s particularly interesting to see the iPhone continue perform like this in 2025. After all, it’s been apparent for months now that Apple did not follow through on its advertised AI promises for the iPhone 16 line. To wit, Counterpoint says that the iPhone 16e, the company’s “more affordable” device, ranked sixth in the top selling smartphones of March. People are continuing to buy iPhones in droves.

Is it possible these customers are buying iPhones based on Apple’s past advertisements? Sure. The company still advertises Apple Intelligence with each iPhone on its site, so AI could still be driving people’s desires to buy iPhones. I’m not convinced, though. If AI were a priority, I think most customers would be buying from the companies that have been rolling out AI features at a steady clip. Samsung and Google immediately come to mind: Google’s latest I/O event was all about AI, and you can experience a number of AI features on Android devices made by both companies. Again, maybe Samsung’s four “top 10” smartphones are a result of its AI efforts. It’s entirely possible, but I continue to be unconvinced.

I see this list of best-selling iPhones and Galaxies, and I see one thing: established market trends. I think the truth is, a lot of people like Galaxies, and even more people like iPhones. People switch phones all the time, especially in the Android ecosystem, but based on the data, it seems like when it’s time to buy a new phone, most iPhone users buy a new iPhone, and most Galaxy users buy a new Galaxy. Ecosystems are powerful things, and when you’ve poured your entire digital life into one platform—including all the messaging, purchases, and cloud storage—it’s rare you want to mix it up.

That’s me to a T: As much as I respect Android, I’m stuck in the Apple ecosystem, and, as such, really only consider a new iPhone when it comes time to upgrade. Almost every single person in my immediate circle is the same way. The Samsung fans I know also stick to the pattern, just with the newest Galaxy. The decision for me is never whether to buy an iPhone or a Galaxy: it’s whether to buy the Pro or the Pro Max.

AI enthusiasm isn’t strong enough to drive smartphone sales

AI is without a doubt the trend in tech right now, and people are using it. But I don’t think many are considering it when buying their devices—especially smartphones. I think people buy the phone they like, and then configure it after the fact to access their AI tools. Hell, Apple integrated ChatGPT into my iPhone, and I still have the ChatGPT app. AI features can be useful—it’s great that Apple has its own version of Magic Eraser now—but AI features alone aren’t enough to sway customers en masse. If OpenAI made a smartphone, would you buy it? I’m guessing probably not.

If the AI train continues on, maybe people will start buying the phones and devices that best integrate AI tools out of the box. Android is way ahead of Apple on this front—just look at Google replacing its assistant with Gemini—so perhaps we’ll see Galaxy phones take more of a lead in global sales in future quarters, or even an appearance from a Pixel or two. Or, maybe people are fine downloading the apps they need to get their AI fix, and leaving other factors in play when choosing a phone to buy.

I can’t predict the future; I can only note what I see in the present. And, right now, I’m seeing two things at once—I’m seeing a lot of people talking about ChatGPT, and I’m seeing a lot of people buying and using iPhones. Outside of my tech news circles, I’ve heard not a peep about Apple’s struggles in the AI race.

Braves rookie AJ Smith-Shawver tore UCL in injury Spencer Strider appeared to catch

Atlanta Braves starting pitcher AJ Smith-Shawver will miss the remainder of the 2025 season and more with a torn UCL, an injury he sustained under curious circumstances.

MLB.com’s Mark Bowman reported the diagnosis hours after the Braves placed the Rookie of the Year candidate on the 60-day IL. It has reportedly not been determined if he will undergo Tommy John surgery or the newer internal brace procedure, which requires less rehab time, but both surgeries will knock him out until at least the start of the 2026 season.

The injury occurred during Smith-Shawver’s start Thursday against the Philadelphia Phillies. He encountered his first misfortune when a 96.6 mph line drive from Bryson Stott hit him in the ankle, but he remained in the game.

During his next few pitches to Trea Turner, Smith-Shawver started to wince and shake his arm. The Braves coaching staff appeared to notice the issue only after another pitcher, Spencer Strider, saw what was happening and pointed it out to them. Strider has his own experience with elbow issues, having missed most of 2024 with a torn UCL.

Turner flied out on the fourth pitch of the at-bat, and it was only after that when Smith-Shawver reportedly told Snitker he felt a “pop” in his elbow.

Smith-Shawver’s velocity was dropping significantly while all that was happening. His last pitch to Stott was a 95.8 mph four-seamer, a tick below every other four-seamer he had thrown that day. The velocity kept dropping against Turner, with his four-seamer going from 95.9 mph to 94.7 mph to 94.2 mph on the final pitch.

AJ Smith-Shawver’s Rookie of the Year campaign is officially over. (Photo by Abdoul Sow/MLB Photos via Getty Images)
Abdoul Sow via Getty Images

Whether Braves coaches should have been more proactive — or aware — of Smith-Shawver’s troubles, the 22-year-old is a notable loss for a team trying to recover from a slow start.

Smith-Shawver was ranked as the No. 83 overall prospect by Baseball America entering this season and was off to a strong enough start that he was third in BetMGM’s NL Rookie of the Year odds as of Thursday. Now, the Braves will have to wait until next year, at least, to see him on the mound again.

Braves rookie AJ Smith-Shawver tore UCL in injury Spencer Strider appeared to catch

Atlanta Braves starting pitcher AJ Smith-Shawver will miss the remainder of the 2025 season and more with a torn UCL, an injury he sustained under curious circumstances.

MLB.com’s Mark Bowman reported the diagnosis hours after the Braves placed the Rookie of the Year candidate on the 60-day IL. It has reportedly not been determined if he will undergo Tommy John surgery or the newer internal brace procedure, which requires less rehab time, but both surgeries will knock him out until at least the start of the 2026 season.

The injury occurred during Smith-Shawver’s start Thursday against the Philadelphia Phillies. He encountered his first misfortune when a 96.6 mph line drive from Bryson Stott hit him in the ankle, but he remained in the game.

During his next few pitches to Trea Turner, Smith-Shawver started to wince and shake his arm. The Braves coaching staff appeared to notice the issue only after another pitcher, Spencer Strider, saw what was happening and pointed it out to them. Strider has his own experience with elbow issues, having missed most of 2024 with a torn UCL.

Turner flied out on the fourth pitch of the at-bat, and it was only after that when Smith-Shawver reportedly told Snitker he felt a “pop” in his elbow.

Smith-Shawver’s velocity was dropping significantly while all that was happening. His last pitch to Stott was a 95.8 mph four-seamer, a tick below every other four-seamer he had thrown that day. The velocity kept dropping against Turner, with his four-seamer going from 95.9 mph to 94.7 mph to 94.2 mph on the final pitch.

AJ Smith-Shawver’s Rookie of the Year campaign is officially over. (Photo by Abdoul Sow/MLB Photos via Getty Images)
Abdoul Sow via Getty Images

Whether Braves coaches should have been more proactive — or aware — of Smith-Shawver’s troubles, the 22-year-old is a notable loss for a team trying to recover from a slow start.

Smith-Shawver was ranked as the No. 83 overall prospect by Baseball America entering this season and was off to a strong enough start that he was third in BetMGM’s NL Rookie of the Year odds as of Thursday. Now, the Braves will have to wait until next year, at least, to see him on the mound again.