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Brewers recall DL Hall from 60-day IL, option Logan Henderson
Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

The Milwaukee Brewers recalled left-hander DL Hall from the 60-day injured list ahead of Monday's series opener against the visiting Boston Red Sox.

Hall, 26, sustained a left lat strain in spring training. He made four rehab appearances (three starts) in the minors, going 1-0 and allowing no runs on four hits with 15 strikeouts in 10 2/3 innings.

He is 5-3 with a 4.74 ERA in 42 career games (eight starts) for the Baltimore Orioles (2022-23) and Brewers (2024).

In a somewhat surprising move, Milwaukee optioned history-making rookie right-hander Logan Henderson, 23, to Triple-A Nashville to make room for Hall.

Henderson is 3-0 with a 1.71 ERA through four starts this season, with 29 strikeouts and six walks in 21 innings. He allowed one run on five hits in five innings in Sunday's 6-5 win at Pittsburgh.

He became the 10th pitcher in MLB history, and first in Brewers history, to strike out at least seven batters in each of his first three career starts.

"The kid has been so good," Brewers manager Pat Murphy said Monday. "He wasn't quite as sharp yesterday, but he's been so good, and he's handled it so well. The conversation about going down, he's just, 'I totally get it. I totally understand. I know how this works. I'm expecting it. Just know I'm going to go down there and work my tail off, and I'm going to improve this and that, and talk about a few things.'

"I mean, the kid's a delight to have around."

This article first appeared on Field Level Media and was syndicated with permission.

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Mets interested in acquiring veteran outfielder
MLB

Mets interested in acquiring veteran outfielder

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Packers starter hits back at Matt LaFleur, calls for 'bus fine'
NFL

Packers starter hits back at Matt LaFleur, calls for 'bus fine'

Matt LaFleur is earning the ire of several of his Green Bay Packers players early in training camp. On Tuesday, LaFleur punished offensive tackle Rasheed Walker for his altercation with defensive end Kingsley Enagbare. However, the most interesting interaction of the day came between LaFleur and tight end Tucker Kraft. Per Matt Schneidman of The Athletic, LaFleur called out Kraft for two questionable fumbles during the first week of practice. Both "fumbles" came after the play was over or when the ball fell out of bounds. "Certainly, we all know what kind of player Tucker Kraft is and can be," LaFleur said. "He can’t allow Evan Williams to reach around and punch a ball out, so it is challenging everybody and hopefully that makes us that much better.” The third-year tight end took issue with LaFleur calling him out in front of the media and blamed the coaching staff for implementing practice rules that made it easy for offensive players to fumble. "I’d say a lot of the times — there’s certain rules you play with in practice, like just letting the defense punch repeatedly," Kraft said. "You’re not allowed to stiff-arm. I guess all I have are excuses. Yes, I am working on not fumbling the ball in practice." Schneidman said Kraft answered the question with a tone of sarcasm. Kraft was frustrated that he couldn't defend the ball by stiff-arming a defender trying to poke the ball from his undefended arm. Kraft acknowledged that during practice, he has to "play by the rules" LaFleur makes and is trying to work on having a "yes sir, no sir" attitude with his head coach. He then made a vague reference about a "bus fine" and accused LaFleur of throwing him under the bus in front of the media. Schneidman believes the tight end might actually be calling for Green Bay to fine LaFleur after his discouraging quote Tuesday morning. "So yes, the Packers’ third-year tight end might be calling for his head coach to be fined — not by the league, of course, but by the team — for what he perceived as throwing him under the bus," Schneidman wrote. "Is Kraft being serious about fining LaFleur? "Probably not. Is he peeved LaFleur called him out? It sure seems like it." LaFleur might do better to have a conversation with Kraft before dragging his name into news conferences with reporters. It's clear Tucker doesn't see eye-to-eye with LaFleur about fumbles. This is a good reminder to those getting overly excited or nervous reading practice reports that what happens at practice should be taken with a grain of salt. Most likely, Tucker is going to be fine.

Shedeur Sanders Trade Speculation Ramps Up After 'Perfect Practice'
General Sports

Shedeur Sanders Trade Speculation Ramps Up After 'Perfect Practice'

During Monday's training camp practice, Cleveland Browns rookie quarterback Shedeur Sanders reportedly completed 9-of-9 passes with two touchdowns. While there has been plenty of buzz about what that can do for his standing in the team's quarterback battle, former NFL offensive lineman Rich Ohrnberger is convinced that the Browns may be building Sanders up for another reason. Ohrnberger suggested that not only could the defense be limited on purpose in terms of the plays that were being called in order to see how Sanders reacts, and also suggested the Browns want to show Sanders succeeding to increase his trade value. Would the Cleveland Browns Trade Shedeur Sanders? Although it'd be a bit surprising for a team to move on from a quarterback before seeing what he can do against real competition, the Browns' quarterback room is crowded. They have a veteran journeyman and Super Bowl champion in Joe Flacco, a former first-round pick in Kenny Pickett who they traded for and rookie Dillon Gabriel, who they drafted before Sanders in this year's draft. The demand for Sanders NFL if someone else goes down around the NFL. Cleveland's Front Office Must Decide How They Feel About Shedeur Sanders While the Browns risked virtually nothing by selecting Sanders with pick No. 144, owner Jimmy Haslam made it clear on Tuesday that drafting the son of Deion Sanders was general manager Andrew Berry's call. "If you'd told me...Let's see, we picked him on Saturday right," Haslam said. "Friday night, driving home y'all are gonna pick Shedeur. I would say 'That's not happening.' But we had a conversation early that morning and we had a conversation early that day. I think we had the right people involved in the conversation. At the end of the day that's Andrew Berry's call. Andrew made the call to pick Shedeur." If a consensus is reached that Sanders isn't bringing what they had hoped to the table, it only makes sense to trade him. However, if they feel as if he can finally end their search for a franchise quarterback or can be a viable backup, trading him doesn't seem like a smart move. What Shedeur Sanders Brings to the Table Although Sanders fell to the fifth round, he was widely viewed as a first-round talent throughout the entire draft process. While he doesn't have a massive arm or tremendous athleticism, he is extremely cerebral and efficient. He left Colorado having broken over 100 school records, setting the FBS record for completion percentage in a career (71.8%) and is also easily the most marketable rookie in his class. In April, sports business insider Darren Rovell reported that Sanders had the "No. 1 selling jersey among all 2025 draft picks." So, if the Browns can't find a role for Sanders, chances are another team gladly will.

Lakers' Bronny James Looks Like Completely Different Player for LA
NBA

Lakers' Bronny James Looks Like Completely Different Player for LA

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