Truth & Rumors > MLB

Orioles prospect Jonathan Schoop out with fractured back

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09:54 AM ET 05.23 | The Baltimore Orioles learned today that infield prospect Jonathan Schoop will miss some significant time with a back injury. The second baseman will be meeting with a second doctor to get another opinion on his back, but it looks like the diagnosis will not be any better. Schoop had been playing with Triple-A Norfolk and Double-A Bowie over the past two seasons. He was with Norfolk at the time of the injury.

FanSided.com

Jonathan Schoop, Yuki Taguchi/WBCI/MLB Photos via Getty Images Jonathan Schoop, Yuki Taguchi/WBCI/MLB Photos via Getty Images

Donnie Baseball trying to get himself fired

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07:10 AM ET 05.23 | Don Mattingly peeled a little paint before Wednesday's game, ripping into the team that has him on unsettled ground. Either Mattingly spoke with the blessing of general manager Ned Colletti, team president Stan Kasten and the club's new ownership, or his words amounted to an angry, desperate stand from a man who knows he soon might lose his job. One rival GM said it had to be the latter, finding it difficult to believe that upper management would endorse criticism of its own strategies. "He's trying to get himself fired," the GM said upon learning of Mattingly's comments. Mattingly rarely is as candid or expansive as he was during his pregame session with reporters Wednesday. His remarks offered a glimpse of his frustration.

FOX Sports

Don Mattingly, Getty Images Don Mattingly, Getty Images

Cubs travel to meet with Oklahoma's Gray

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07:09 AM ET 05.23 | With the clock ticking toward their No. 2 overall pick in the draft on June 6, the Cubs' top officials are taking their due diligence on the road. Team president Theo Epstein, general manager Jed Hoyer, top scouting/player development executive Jason McLeod and amateur scouting director Jaron Madison [were in Oklahoma City Wednesday] to meet with Oklahoma right-hander Jonathan Gray. ... [Gray] is the more powerful of the draft's top pair of pitchers, but Stanford right-hander Mark Appel -- a senior who refused to sign after being drafted eighth overall a year ago -- is considered the more refined pitcher. Barring unforeseen issues arising with either pitcher in the next two weeks, the Cubs are expected to take whichever pitcher the Houston Astros do not take [at No. 1].

Chicago Sun-Times

Mark Appel, Icon Sports Mark Appel, Icon Sports

'Baffling' Davis playing his way out of New York

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07:08 AM ET 05.23 | The options are, no doubt, being discussed in Queens. Send Ike Davis to the minor leagues. Don't send him to the minor leagues. It doesn't make a difference in the big picture. Here's the greater takeaway, as the Mets saw Matt Harvey's turn in the rotation overshadowed by yet another Ay Yi Y-Ike moment: He just isn't good enough a player to be generating this much agita. So he shouldn't be part of the Mets' plans next year and beyond, when they vow to be out of full rebuilding mode. "This is absolutely baffling to everybody," manager Terry Collins said, after a very questionable Davis decision on defense led to the Mets losing, 7-4, to the Reds at Citi Field. ... "We've got to get this guy going, because we've got to figure out where he's going to fit."

New York Post

Ike Davis, Getty Images Ike Davis, Getty Images

Nats desperate for an attitude adjustment

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07:07 AM ET 05.23 | On Sunday night, Ryan Mattheus broke his pitching hand in anger, an incident that came on the heels of Bryce Harper running face-first into the Dodgers' scoreboard with a 6-0 lead. Then he compounded his recklessness by coming back too soon, aggravated his swollen knee (a parting gift from the fence) and missed more time. ... This month, Stephen Strasburg melted down in a scoreless game in which he had filthy stuff, losing his poise after Ryan Zimmerman made another error. With two out and only one on, he should have just attacked the No. 8 hitter. Instead, addled by his own perfectionism, he allowed four runs in a loss. This pattern has gone on all season. Whatever bad happens to them, they make it worse, usually for no reason and in a manner that suggests they have mashed potatoes for brains.

The Washington Post

Bryce Harper, Icon Sports Bryce Harper, Icon Sports

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