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Long-suffering Astros finally in contention

HOUSTON (AP) Here's something new: The Houston Astros finally have reason to look forward to the second half of the season.

After several miserable years of rebuilding, losing and more losing, these Astros - powered by bearded ace Dallas Keuchel, diminutive second baseman Jose Altuve and rookie Carlos Correa - are just a half-game back in the American League West at the All-Star break and eyeing their first playoff trip since 2005.

Houston's 49 wins are the most by the franchise in the first half since 2003 and it's the first time since 2001 the team has been at least seven games over .500 at midseason.

A year ago, the Astros were 19 1/2 games back with little hope of being in contention.

It certainly wasn't an easy path to become relevant again. This proud franchise known for its famed Killer B's of Jeff Bagwell, Craig Biggio and Jeff Bagwell lost 100-plus games in three straight seasons from 2011-2013 with low-budget teams filled with no-name players. Virtually any veteran of value was traded to restock a barren farm system.

''It's been a painful process from where we've been in the last 10 years to where we're at now,'' Biggio said. ''But you look at the light at the end of the rainbow right now and I'm excited for our guys.''

The long climb began last season when the Astros made a 19-game leap to end the 100-loss streak. But they still dropped 92 games and finished fourth in the AL West.

A beefed-up bullpen, a couple new veteran role players and an infusion of young talent this season helped Houston to a surprising start. The Astros opened the year 18-7 to race out to a six-game lead in the division and remained in first-place from April 19 until six straight losses helped the Angels take the lead at the break.

They've done it with powerful hitting, heads-up baserunning and a pitching staff that ranks among the best in the AL. At .240, the team's batting average is second-lowest in the AL, but the Astros have managed to produce anyway and are fourth in the AL in runs scored.

That's largely due to the pop in a lineup that leads the majors with 124 home runs. Luis Valbuena has 19 and there are 15 apiece from Evan Gattis and Chris Carter.

Houston is tops in the AL with 69 steals, thanks in large part to Altuve's 25.

Keuchel is 11-4 and his 2.23 ERA is second in the AL. His masterful first-half performance not only aided the Astros' ascent, but made him the first Houston pitcher to start an All-Star game since Roger Clemens in 2004.

A bullpen that was the weakest link last season (25 blown saves) is completely different: Its 2.67 ERA is second in the AL and the group's 17 wins are tied for most in the league.

Years of high draft picks have finally started to pay off for the Astros, too, and they're reaping the benefits of homegrown talent. Lance McCullers, a first-rounder in 2012, and Vince Velasquez, a second-rounder in 2010, have joined the rotation.

But the most sparkling rookie in Houston is undoubtedly Correa. The 20-year-old shortstop and top overall pick in 2012 made his debut on June 8 and is expected to be the face of the franchise as it returns to prominence.

He's lived up to those lofty expectations early and hit .276 with seven homers and 19 RBIs on top of more than a few dazzling defensive plays to garner AL rookie of the month honors after less than 30 days in the big leagues.

His arrival in Houston has created a buzz not seen at Minute Maid Park in years and crowds of more than 32,000 fans showed up for his first two home games. Drafted as a 17-year-old out of high school in Puerto Rico, Correa is polished beyond his years both on and off the field.

''I'm just glad the fans show up to support the team,'' Correa said when someone asked him about the spike in attendance. ''I think they come here because we've got a winning team.''

A setback came for the Astros when dynamic outfielder George Springer was hit by a pitch that fractured his wrist recently. He will be out for several weeks, but Jed Lowrie should return soon after sitting out since April 27 after thumb surgery. His .300 batting average could help ramp up an offense that has averaged just 1.167 runs a game in the current losing skid which the Astros will look to snap when they host Texas on Friday.
 
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Inconsistent Dodgers lead NL West

LOS ANGELES (AP) The Dodgers begin the second half with a 4 1/2-game lead over San Francisco in the NL West, having managed to remain in first since the end of May despite a rotation hit by injuries and an inconsistent offense.

They've used 12 starting pitchers after losing two-fifths of their rotation for the season, the bullpen has been rocked by injury, and yet they own their largest lead at the break since 2009.

It helps that much of the National League has been playing .500 ball so far.

''I want to stay where we're at,'' manager Don Mattingly said. ''If that's what it takes to win a division, then hopefully we do that. How you get in (the playoffs) has zero to do with it.''

The Dodgers open a 10-game trip against NL East opponents starting Friday at Washington. The first-place Nationals have won nine of their last 11 at home. Clayton Kershaw (6-6, 2.85 ERA) will start for the Dodgers after taking the loss in the All-Star Game on Tuesday.

The trip takes the Dodgers to third-place Atlanta for three games before playing four games in New York against the second-place Mets.

The Giants have a more favorable schedule coming out of the break. They travel to third-place Arizona and fourth-place San Diego before returning home to host Oakland, last in the AL West, and Milwaukee, last in the NL Central.

The Dodgers and Giants are tied for the most shutouts in the majors with 13.

''This is when baseball gets really fun the rest of the way,'' backup catcher A.J. Ellis said.

Zack Greinke (3-2, 1.39) has overshadowed Kershaw with a scoreless innings streak of 35 2/3 while positioning him for a Cy Young Award bid. Brett Anderson has stepped up as the third starter to salvage a rotation weakened by season-ending surgeries to Hyun-Jin Ryu and Brandon McCarthy.

''You got to replace and that's where you have trouble,'' Mattingly said. ''It has a trickle-down effect on your club.''

Especially the backend of the rotation, which has struggled on the inexperienced arms of Mike Bolsinger and Carlos Frias, leaving the team in need of reinforcements at the July trade deadline.

Kershaw's .500 record didn't impress his peers or fans enough to vote him into the All-Star Game, with the left-hander getting there as a replacement in his fifth straight appearance.

''It has been frustrating at times this year,'' he said. ''People have high expectations for me, and that's good. I expect a lot out of myself, which helps me. I wasn't very good for a while there.''

Closer Kenley Jansen has come back strong after missing six weeks because of foot surgery, but five other relievers spent time on the disabled list.

Even when their pitching has been good, the Dodgers have struggled to score runs.

Yasiel Puig's numbers highlight the inconsistency. The 24-year-old right fielder is batting .261 with four home runs and 14 RBI after dealing with a hamstring issue and a callus on his left hand.

''He just needs to continue to work and be consistent with his work,'' Mattingly said. ''You get out what you put in. Sometimes it's more trouble for guys like Yasiel who things come easily to. If you do that work, your talent is going to shine.''

Rookie Joc Pederson had 20 home runs in the first half, and he finished second in the Home Run Derby. But the 23-year-old center fielder tailed off before the break, hitting .145 with 21 strikeouts, eight hits and three RBI in his last 15 games.

''It's a matter of him staying steady,'' Mattingly said. ''His demeanor has been good, which tells me a lot.''

Catcher Yasmani Grandal has settled in since coming from San Diego in the Matt Kemp trade, earning his first All-Star bid while hitting .282 with 14 homers and 36 RBI.

Adrian Gonzalez was 1 for 11 in the last three games before the break, but he's been the team's most productive hitter with a .283 average, 18 homers and 55 RBI.

The Dodgers expect some additions in the second half. Left fielder Carl Crawford is close to returning from rehabbing an oblique strain. Cuban infielder Hector Olivera, who signed a $62.5 million deal in May, will join the team when his hamstring allows.
 
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Marlins have been surprisingly bad

MIAMI (AP) The Miami Marlins have gone 8-6 since Giancarlo Stanton went on the disabled list, with their feeble offense finally showing signs of life.

In 12 innings since an injury to All-Star second baseman Dee Gordon, Miami has scored 17 runs and celebrated two victories.

For the Marlins, little has gone according to expectations. They've been surprisingly bad, not an easy feat for a franchise that hasn't been to the playoffs since 2003, and their 38-51 record is the third-worst in the majors.

But they played better with Stanton and Gordon both sidelined, sustaining faint hopes the Marlins might yet make a run and show they underachieved the first half of the year.

''It has been frustrating for all of us,'' president of baseball operations Michael Hill said. ''We expected to put ourselves into position to play into October.''

The hole the Marlins dug is probably too deep to get back into playoff contention, and a surge this month is unlikely. Gordon is expected to be sidelined until next week because of a dislocated left thumb, while major league home run leader Stanton will be out another one to three weeks recovering from a broken left hand. The next 10 games are on the road, where the Marlins are 14-28.

A bad trip might make them sellers at the July 31 trade deadline. Right-handers Dan Haren and Mat Latos, who are to become free agents at the end of this season, are the Marlins most likely to be on the market.

''As we work toward the 31st, if there's a deal that makes sense for us moving forward, we'll obviously entertain it,'' Hill said.

However, the Marlins will not be breaking up their roster as they've sometimes done at midseason. Hill said he still believes in the core of young talent, including Stanton, ace Jose Fernandez, left fielder Christian Yelich, shortstop Adeiny Hechavarria and rookie catcher J.T. Realmuto.

''We have controllable pieces that are talented - everyday pieces we're excited about,'' Hill said. ''We still have a supreme belief in their talent. We've had some ups and downs, especially with the young players. But we're still positioned to take another step this year and continue to build with a talented group.''

Some young players have indeed underperformed. Center fielder Marcell Ozuna (.249, 26 RBIs) is trying to find his swing after a demotion to Triple-A. Yelich (.264, 20 RBIs) has hit better lately after an awful start.

Injuries have been a major impediment. Five of the nine players in the opening day lineup have spent time on disabled list, including right-hander Henderson Alvarez, who is 0-4 in four starts and is now on a rehabilitation assignment. Latos and right-hander Jarred Cosart have also been sidelined and are a combined 4-10. Fernandez is 2-0 in two starts, but sat out the first three months recovering from Tommy John surgery.

An odd managerial change failed to improve the team's fortunes. The Marlins were 16-22 (.421) with Mike Redmond and are 22-29 (.431) with former general manager Dan Jennings, who had no previous managing experience.

There have been bright spots, including the return of Fernandez and the emergence of Realmuto, first baseman Justin Bour, new closer A.J. Ramos and reliever Carter Capps. All have helped keep the team afloat in Stanton's absence.

The Marlins swept a three-game series against the Giants without their slugger, and won three of four from the Reds before the All-Star break.

''I'm proud of the way the guys closed out the first half,'' Jennings said. ''We're playing with the energy and fire it's going to take. We have a chance to jump out the second half and play the way we're capable of.''
 
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Pirates look to keep up momentum

PITTSBURGH (AP) Jordy Mercer and Pedro Alvarez were on the way to their lockers to savor another improbable comeback late Sunday night when the Pittsburgh Pirates teammates stopped in unison in front of one of the half-dozen large-screen televisions in the clubhouse.

They stood, grins glued in place, to relive Gregory Polanco's walkoff single that lifted the Pirates to a 6-5, 10-inning win over St. Louis, a victory that brought Pittsburgh to within just 2 1/2 games of the once seemingly uncatchable Cardinals. After seeing Polanco's soft liner to right fall in front of Jason Heyward to score Jung Ho Kang and give the Pirates their second straight extra-inning win over their rival in as many nights, they laughed while watching the team pour out of the dugout in celebration.

''If people didn't think we're for real, they probably do now,'' Mercer said. ''I just think it's the culture we're trying to create here. We're slowly getting there. Sure we've got ways to go. We know we're heading in the right direction.''

Quickly.

A distant speck in St. Louis' rearview mirror less than three weeks ago, Pittsburgh begins the second half of the season on Friday in Milwaukee looking to carry the momentum from an early summer surge that has them in firm position for a third straight playoff berth.

The giddiness that sprouted from taking three straight from the Cardinals heading into the All-Star break plays in stark contrast to the quiet and puzzled clubhouse of early May, when star centerfielder Andrew McCutchen called himself out for being ''under mediocre'' and manager Clint Hurdle publicly challenged his players after the Pirates slogged through the opening quarter of the season four games under .500. Pittsburgh is an MLB-best 35-13 since.

''If we play with the mindset that if we play our best baseball, we can get what we want to get done done, we can go where we want to go,'' Hurdle said. ''There's a lot of baseball to be played and the season is going to bring you a lot of different things. We've got to stay focused on the game we're playing that day.''

The novelty of winning has worn off in Pittsburgh after two decades of misery. Hurdle likes to say he is ''easy to please but hard to satisfy.'' He would rather replace the high-wire act that comes with making the postseason as a wild card - which the Pirates have done each of the last two Octobers - with an NL Central title and that assurance of a spot in the division series.

So would his team.

''We're in a good place right now,'' pitcher Francisco Liriano said. ''We're playing good baseball. We've been playing good baseball all year. We continue to play the way we're playing, we'll be OK in the end.''

The Pirates have been blessed with dominant starting pitching and a remarkably good health. While third baseman Josh Harrison is out until at least the end of August after undergoing surgery on his left thumb, his loss has been offset a bit by the rapid maturation of Kang, a rookie who is the first position player to make a direct jump from the Korean Baseball Organization to the majors.

Though McCutchen has been steady as usual - hitting .297 with four homers and 14 RBIs over the last month - he's not doing it alone. Starling Marte is on pace for 90-plus RBIs. Neil Walker is batting .345 since June 19 and catcher Francisco Cervelli has surpassed even the most optimistic expectations after Russell Martin left for Toronto and $82 million in the offseason.

When McCutchen's career-best 18-game hitting streak ended Sunday, Marte, Kang and the rest of the Pirates scrabbled together to erase a 5-3 deficit in the 10th off St. Louis closer Trevor Rosenthal. Pittsburgh entered the break with the second-best record in the majors and more than a little bit of swagger.

''It's not just one guy coming up with big hits, big plays, it's a bunch of us,'' Mercer said.

How much larger that group will grow over the next three months is uncertain. General manager Neal Huntington remains fiscally pragmatic about the prospect of adding a significant piece before the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline, calling the current climate one of the toughest seller's markets he's seen. The move toward rebuilding teams asking for established major leaguers or prospects in the high minors in exchange for proven veterans means the Pirates likely have fewer chips to throw in should they get in the mix for the bold-faced names they have largely avoided.

Either way, they expect to be there in the end. The anxiousness of early spring has disappeared. Another exciting fall awaits.

''There are so many games left, anything can happen,'' Mercer said.
 
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Cardinals enter 2nd half with best record

ST. LOUIS (AP) Bruised and battle-tested, the St. Louis Cardinals watched their division lead dwindle to 2 1/2 games entering the All-Star break.

They still have the best record and stingiest staff in the major leagues - and hopes of some reinforcements.

The Cardinals anticipate getting Matt Holliday back from the 15-day disabled list, too, just in time for their return series against the New York Mets at home beginning Friday.

''I think guys don't buy into the fact that we can't do something,'' said manager Mike Matheny, who has presided over a strong body of work by an ensemble featuring multiple rookies and other temporary fixes. ''There's going to be times during the season you're going to lose significant pieces.''

The Cardinals are 56-33 despite injuries to ace Adam Wainwright, Matt Adams, Jon Jay, Jordan Walden, Marco Gonzales and Holliday, out since early June with a quadriceps injury.

Through great times, when the NL Central lead was nine games, and lean days, Matheny has been steadfast in ignoring the won-loss record and demanding daily commitment.

''It comes down to `What am I going to do right now? Am I going to be able to do my part, do my piece?''' he said. ''It doesn't matter who is here or not here.''

---

Things to watch for the rest of the way with the Cardinals:

PITCHING PROWESS

The stingiest pitching staff in the majors is by far the biggest reason the Cardinals, who have been to the NL Championship Series or better a franchise-best four straight seasons, have a good shot to keep that run going. They have a 2.71 ERA, best at the break in the majors since the 1981 Astros posted a 2.81 ERA, according to STATS. They landed three pitchers on the All-Star team: 10-game winners Carlos Martinez and Michael Wacha, plus closer Trevor Rosenthal.

Wacha, Lance Lynn, Martinez, John Lackey and Jaime Garcia have a collective 2.84 ERA, the best pre-break showing by the franchise since 1968 when Bob Gibson set a major-league record with a 1.12 ERA.

SPOTTY OFFENSE

Holliday's return to the No. 3 slot could be a key for a lineup that's underachieved much of the time scoring three or fewer runs nearly half of the time. He's a proven run-producer, one of three active players with 1,000 career RBIs and a .300 batting average.

All-Stars Jhonny Peralta and Yadier Molina have been two-way standouts at shortstop and catcher, but the Cardinals could use more production from Matt Carpenter, Jason Heyward and the streaky Mark Reynolds. Carpenter is back at leadoff after struggling batting second, which figures to help, and Heyward has picked it up after a slow start.

Matheny's strategy seems to be keeping the pressure off the bats.

''Our pitching sets the tone,'' he said. Guys have been doing a nice job of keeping us in games all the way through, the bullpen has done a nice job of finishing it up. Finding a way to win has almost been like a theme for our club.''

FILL THE BLANKS

Randal Grichuk, once billed as an add-on in the swap of David Freese to the Angels for Peter Bourjos, has thrived with regular duty in left field in Holliday's absence with seven homers and 26 RBIs in 191 at-bats. The ball jumps off his bat. Reynolds and a handful of rookies have made Adams' likely season-ending quad injury in May less of a blow. Kevin Siegrist and Miguel Socolovich have stepped up in place of Walden in the set-up role.

COMEBACK KIDS

Garcia's contribution is a luxury coming off career-threatening thoracic outlet surgery for nerve issues that cost him much of the previous two seasons. In seven starts, he's 3-3 with a 1.69 ERA, and he could return from a groin injury this weekend. Wacha shows no signs of the stress reaction to his pitching shoulder that cost him most of the second half of last season.

HOME PROWESS

The success story begins at Busch Stadium, where they're 31-11 for a major league-best .738 winning percentage, spurred by capacity crowds most games and a 2.31 staff ERA. Before the break, they won 11 of 14 home series.
 
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Brewers poor start could make them sellers


MILWAUKEE (AP) Once in free-fall, the last-place Milwaukee Brewers have stabilized now that it's summer.

The offense has picked up, buttressed by an effective bullpen led by lights-out closer Francisco Rodriguez. With the second half starting Friday against Pittsburgh, manager Craig Counsell is hoping the Brewers can build on their 21-18 record since June 1.

''The last couple weeks, I think we've been playing much better baseball,'' All-Star outfielder Ryan Braun said this week in Cincinnati. ''So the goal is just to get back to being consistently competitive.''

The improvement may not be enough to prevent the Brewers from becoming sellers at the trade deadline, hamstrung by a 17-34 start that has left them in the NL Central cellar for three months. At 38-52, the Brewers are 18 1/2 games back of first-place St. Louis in the loaded NL Central, and 10 1/2 games out of the wild card.

Of Milwaukee's two All Stars, Rodriguez might be more likely to go. The veteran known as ''K-Rod'' is 19 of 19 in save opportunities with a 1.41 ERA.

Rodriguez agreed to a two-year, $13 million contract in spring training.

Braun is having a bounce-back season, hitting .275 with 16 homers and 56 RBIs in 85 games. The right-handed slugger, who had been hampered by right thumb injury the previous two years, made his first All-Star team since 2012.

It was also Braun's first All-Star appearance since a 65-game suspension in 2013 for his connection to the Biogenesis doping scandal. In the All-Star Game, Braun's slicing triple down the right-field line and hustle around the bases in the ninth inning offered a reminder of how dangerous Braun can be at the plate.

But Braun's contract could make him a less-attractive trade target. A seven-year, $105 million extension signed in 2011 keeps him with the Brewers through 2020.

Any rebuild of the Brewers will likely include Braun in the middle of the order.

Getting catcher Jonathan Lucroy back in the lineup has helped, too. He returned on June 1 after spending nearly six weeks on the disabled list with a broken left toe.

Some other notes about the Brewers going into the second half:

WHO'S GOING?: Besides Rodriguez, veterans who could draw strong interest from contending clubs include third baseman Aramis Ramirez, outfielder Gerardo Parra and first baseman Adam Lind.

Ramirez and Parra are in the last years of their deals, and Ramirez has said he will likely retire after this season. But he could provide a veteran clubhouse presence to a contender. The left-handed hitting Parra is hitting .309 and can play all three outfield positions.

Hitting .292 with 15 homers, the left-handed hitting Lind could be attractive to an AL club as a first baseman and designated hitter.

GOMEZ AND SEGURA: At his best, Carlos Gomez is the Brewers' ignitor, a power-speed threat who boasts a Gold Glove in center field.

Gomez has been limited at times in the first half with a sore right hamstring and hip. Still, a relatively reasonable contract that expires in 2016 could make him attractive to other clubs.

Gomez and shortstop Jean Segura might bring back the most return among potential trade chips. Segura is hitting .273 with 12 stolen bases, plus nice range at short.

Only 25, Segura is eligible for arbitration next year. But he might be expendable because the Brewers' farm system is loaded at shortstop, starting with top prospect Orlando Arcia.

PITCHING: Speaking of younger players, the emergence of rookie starter Taylor Jungmann has been one of the top first-half story lines for Milwaukee. The right-hander is 4-1 with a 2.15 ERA in seven starts, finishing the first half with a three-hit gem in a 7-1 win Saturday against the Dodgers.

Also, Wily Peralta, a 17-game winner last season, is expected to make a rehab start on Thursday at Double-A Biloxi as he makes his way back from a left oblique injury.
 
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Miggy-less Tigers hope for big second half

DETROIT (AP) Over the past few years, baseball's trade deadline has been a source of excitement and anticipation in Detroit.

Whether he was pulling off a blockbuster deal last year for David Price or adding players like Anibal Sanchez and Jose Iglesias in previous seasons, general manager Dave Dombrowski has always been ready to act.

Now, with the deadline approaching again, Dombrowski is facing questions about his team's short-term goals.

''We're trying to win this year right now,'' he said recently.

The fact that Dombrowski had to reaffirm that philosophy was telling. The Tigers entered the All-Star break at 44-44, in third place in the AL Central. After four straight division titles, they now trail first-place Kansas City by nine games, and there is speculation around Detroit that the team might be better off trading some of its top players and reshaping the roster for next year.

That talk may be premature. Although they have a significant deficit in the division, the Tigers are certainly still in contention for a wild card. At the very least, they can wait a little longer before evaluating what their next moves might be. But so far this year, Detroit has looked average.

''We have to get on a roll and the only way to do that is with good starting pitching,'' Dombrowski said.

It was just one season ago when the Tigers traded for Price at the deadline. In Price, Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander, Detroit had the American League's previous three Cy Young Award winners in the same rotation.

Scherzer is gone. Price is still excellent, but Sanchez is having an up-and-down season and Verlander has made only five starts because of injuries.

Shane Greene and Alfredo Simon, who were acquired last offseason to fill out the back of the rotation, have not pitched well lately. Greene was even sent to the minors for a bit.

''Probably I am a little surprised our pitching hasn't been better overall,'' said Dombrowski, whose contract expires this year. ''Some guys have pitched very well, but overall as a group, I am surprised we haven't pitched a little better.''

Detroit's rotation took a hit when Scherzer left via free agency, and the Tigers now face the prospect of losing Price, who can become a free agent after this season. Outfielder Yoenis Cespedes can also test the market.

Both of those players would certainly be of interest to other teams if Detroit made them available, but the Tigers are by no means giving up on 2015 yet. Their offense - bolstered by the offseason addition of Cespedes and another big year from J.D. Martinez - has scored the third-most runs in the American League and leads the AL in on-base percentage.

''I've said it many times: Over 162 games, I think good teams end up having good records,'' manager Brad Ausmus said. ''I firmly believe this is a good team.''

Last year, the Tigers were certainly a good team, albeit a flawed one, with a shaky bullpen that cost them dearly in the playoffs. Now the bullpen is still a weak spot - as evidenced by Minnesota's seven-run ninth inning in an 8-6 win over Detroit on Friday.

The difference between 2014 and 2015 is that the starting rotation has not been strong enough to mask some of the team's other problems.

Detroit comes out of the All-Star break with a seven-game homestand against Baltimore and Seattle. Win enough of those games, and the postseason race will look more promising - especially with injured slugger Miguel Cabrera due back next month.

But the clock is ticking, and these days, each defeat adds another bit of doubt to this team's immediate future.

''We have to get on a roll at some point,'' Dombrowski said. ''We're not going to be able to play a couple of games, get three games above, then one game above and then back to .500. We are not going to be able to do that and make the postseason.''
 
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After jam with Vedder, Theo ponders moves

CHICAGO (AP) Don't bother asking whether this is the year.

Theo Epstein's answer to the question that's haunted Cubs fans for a century-and-counting hasn't changed. It's the same one he gave four years ago, when Epstein was introduced as the franchise's latest savior to great fanfare and pleaded for patience: He has no idea. Neither does anyone else.

When the club broke training camp back in spring, 2016 seemed like a reasonable guess, or maybe `17. But if Epstein's suddenly fast-filling schedule is any indication, this just might be the one.

For the first time since he took over as the club's baseball operations boss, Wrigley Field is on full alert. Chockfull of young talent and now managed by wily Joe Maddon, the Cubs finally made it to midseason without being mathematically - or just realistically - eliminated from the postseason.

Small as that accomplishment seems, especially measured against their high-flying division rivals in St. Louis and Pittsburgh, there is the whiff of real possibility in the air on Chicago's North Side and the anticipation that reinforcements are on the way. With the trade deadline looming at the end of the month, Epstein is thinking about buying players instead of simply swapping or selling them.

All of a sudden, just like it used to be back in Boston at this time of year, he is crazy busy. And not just with baseball: Epstein found time in the days before the All-Star break to step onstage at a nearby club alongside good friend Eddie Vedder and contribute backup guitar licks and vocals to a pretty good rendition of ''Rockin' in the Free World.'' Good enough, anyway, to raise $425,0000 for a youth charity he began in Boston and expanded to Chicago.

When he sat down for an interview, Epstein looked at ease, but he was still hoarse.

''If somebody came up to me in spring training and said here's where you'll be (47-40) at the end of the first half,'' he began, clearing his throat one more time, ''I'd have taken it in a heartbeat.''

No doubt. Back then, youngsters Kris Bryant and Addison Russell had yet to make their major league debuts and there were plenty of questions about how a handful of added veterans like reliever Jason Motte, catcher Miguel Montero and returning starter Jason Hammel would fit in. Epstein turned that job over to Maddon and he did not disappoint.

''Because we play just about every day, you get into a rhythm right away and then the season becomes a kind of blur,'' Maddon said. ''So if your veterans don't buy in early, it only gets harder and harder to flip the culture.

''I was mostly lucky with this group, because to a man, they bought in really fast,'' he added. ''Made my life a lot easier.''

Of course, it wasn't that simple. Maddon also proved masterful at managing a bullpen-by-committee and made sure understudies like Chris Denorfia and David Ross got enough at-bats to be pressed into starting roles when needed. After Bryant struck out three times in his first big-league game, Maddon made sure he didn't worry about it.

''That's how Joe is,'' Russell said. ''He always says, `If you're going to make a mistake, make it on the aggressive side.' ... When you're young, you just want to go, go, go and I was down on myself because I wasn't stealing as many bases as I thought I should.

''I talked to Joe and he said instead of worrying about that, start picking spots where you can take the extra base,'' Russell added. ''It changed how I looked at running. I think it made me smarter and better on the base paths all the way around.''

Successful as the mix has been so far, Epstein is considering mixing it up even more. Back in 2004, when he helped deliver Boston's first World Series title in 86 years, he was portrayed as the leader of a pack of young general managers determined to build baseball teams that resembled the statistical models they assembled with computers. The truth, at least in Epstein's case, was never that simple.

His greatest strength was striking a balance between the old and new ways of cobbling together teams and being unafraid to rattle the believers in either camp. During his tenure in Chicago, which has aligned with a shift in the game from hitting to pitching, Epstein has taken the long view and loaded up on dynamic young position players.

Just don't bet he won't change course.

Epstein can't know whether this is the year, but he may be willing to roll the dice at the halfway point to find out.

''We'd like to add starting pitching. We're already running the risk of being thin heading into the dog days,'' Epstein said, breaking into a wide smile after sneaking a glance at his phone. ''We'll see.''
 
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White Sox perking up, but is it too late?

CHICAGO (AP) The Chicago White Sox rolled into the All-Star break playing their best ball of the season, finally performing like the team they thought they were after a miserable start.

The question is can they somehow jump into contention?

They are last in the AL Central, 11 games behind division leader Kansas City and 5 1/2 out of the wild card.

The White Sox (41-45) won nine of 11 games before getting shut down by Jake Arrieta in a 3-1 loss to the Cubs on Sunday. Even so, they are 13-7 after dropping eight in a row last month.
 
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All-Star week over, Reds will look to deal

CINCINNATI (AP) Todd Frazier won the Home Run Derby with final-swing drama. Aroldis Chapman blew 'em away in the ninth inning. Even the rain stayed away, moving through town without interrupting the biggest moments of the All-Star Game.

Now, even as Cincinnati Reds fans enjoy the successful festivities, it's time to trade the afterglow for the glum.

The Reds enter the second half of the season looking to trade two of their best pitchers - yeah, including Chapman and his 100 mph heat. They're headed for another grim few months, well out of contention and stuck with several big contracts that leave them little wiggle room for starting over.

The challenges are much different from the All-Star logistics that went extremely well in the city where pro baseball began.
 
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Preview: Fever (8-6) at Mystics (6-6)

Date: July 17, 2015 7:00 PM EDT

A five-game winning streak has turned around the Indiana Fever's season and extending it in the nation's capital would make it their longest in four years.

The Fever look to continue their road success over the Washington Mystics on Friday night in the first matchup at the Verizon Center since last year's decisive playoff meeting.

Indiana (8-6) dropped six of its first nine games before reeling off five wins in a row, including a 73-50 home victory over Washington (6-6) on July 2.

The Fever won seven straight from June 21-July 13, 2011, and they moved closer to matching that run with Wednesday's 83-80 victory over Tulsa.

Tamika Catchings, who turns 36 later this month, had 11 points and 11 rebounds, giving her 3,022 career boards to move into third all-time behind Tina Thompson (3,070) and Lisa Leslie (3,307). She's also 24 points shy of tying Diana Taurasi for second in WNBA history.

Catchings had 26 points and 11 rebounds in an 81-76 overtime win at Washington on Aug. 23 that completed a sweep of the best-of-five Eastern Conference semifinals.

Indiana has won four of the last five regular season games there, winning both last year by three-point margins while Catchings was out with a back injury.

She scored 15 points against the Mystics earlier this month after being limited to five in an 87-75 loss June 20.

Shavonte Zellous scored a season-high 16 points Wednesday in her return after missing eight games with a back injury. She had eight points while missing nine of 12 from the floor at Washington in Game 2.

The Mystics have been outscored by an average of 18.0 points during a three-game slide, which started with the loss at Indiana on July 2. They shot 32.9 percent from the floor in Wednesday's 85-57 loss at Chicago.

Stefanie Dolson had 15 points and 10 rebounds Wednesday after scoring a season-high 22 with 13 boards and six assists in a 79-76 overtime loss to New York on July 9.

The center has hit her averages against Indiana this year, scoring 12 points in each meeting while grabbing 15 rebounds.

Kara Lawson has totaled 13 points on 4-of-17 shooting in two games against the Fever this season after scoring 20 in the finale of their playoff series in 2014. The veteran guard is coming off her worst performance of the year, scoring two points on 1-of-6 shooting against the Sky.


WNBA HEAD TO HEAD

Jul 2, 2015 Score ATS Results
WAS 50 Under: 123
IND « 73 Cover: 26.5
Tools: Recaps

Jun 20, 2015 Score ATS Results
WAS « 87 Cover: 11
IND 75 Over: 162
Tools: Recaps

Aug 25, 2014 Score ATS Results
WAS 0 Over: 0
IND « 0 Cover: 0
Tools:

Aug 23, 2014 Score ATS Results
IND « 81 Cover: 8
WAS 76 Over: 157
Tools: Recaps

Aug 21, 2014 Score ATS Results
WAS 73 Cover: 0
IND « 78 Over: 151
Tools: Recaps

Aug 8, 2014 Score ATS Results
WAS « 74 Cover: 18
IND 61 Under: 135
Tools: Recaps

Jul 2, 2014 Score ATS Results
IND « 80 Cover: 7
WAS 77 Over: 157
Tools: Recaps

Jun 6, 2014 Score ATS Results
IND « 64 Cover: 7
WAS 61 Under: 125
Tools: Recaps

May 23, 2014 Score ATS Results
WAS « 79 Cover: 19.5
IND 63 Under: 142
Tools: Recaps
 
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Preview: Sky (9-5) at Lynx (10-3)

Date: July 17, 2015 8:00 PM EDT

Perhaps the most impressive victory during Chicago's season-high four game winning streak came a week ago at home against the Minnesota Lynx.

However, coach Pokey Chatman expects things to be more difficult when the surging Sky try to avoid a fifth consecutive defeat at Minnesota on Friday night.

Chicago (9-5) shot 50.8 percent from the field, went 21 of 23 from the free-throw line and became the first team this season to drop 90 points on Minnesota in last Friday's 90-83 victory. League scoring leader Elena Delle Donne (24.7) and Cappie Pondexter each recorded 24 points as the Sky handed the Western Conference-leading Lynx (10-3) what's been their lone defeat over the last six contests.

"We're living the dream," Chatman told the Sky's official website over that contest. "Playing basketball and getting paid for it."

Chatman's usual carefree approach to the game continues to rub off on a Sky team that's having fun while going 4-0 since ending June with two straight defeats. Chicago has averaged 90.3 points while shooting 50.7 percent in three games beginning with that win over Minnesota.

Delle Donne finished with 11 points on 4-of-11 shooting during Wednesday's 85-57 rout of Washington, failing to score more than 12 for the third time in four games. Allie Quigley helped pick up Chicago's star with a team-high 15 off the bench while Pondexter added 14 against the Mystics.

"(Delle Donne) doesn't need to score for us to be successful," Chatman said. "I think there will be more attention paid to others. I think you try to cut the head of our snake off but there's more to it."

Though Chatman is confident in Delle Donne's teammates that together make up the top offensive team in the league, she understands it likely will take a complete effort to win at Minnesota. The Lynx are the WNBA's top defensive team and have yielded an average of 54.0 points while winning three straight at home since falling 86-78 to Tulsa on June 21 for its lone setback in six contests there.

The Sky haven't scored more than 69 points while dropping four straight at Minnesota by an average margin of 11 points.

"They are a great team," Chatman said. "They aren't going to worry about us, but more about themselves."

Working her way back from a lingering bout with Lyme disease, Delle Donne had two points in 16 minutes off the bench in last season's 74-64 loss at Minnesota on Aug. 7. Quigley finished with 20 points for the Sky.

Minnesota All-Star Maya Moore had a quiet 17 points in that meeting but scored a season-high 29 in last week's visit to Chicago. Moore (18.8) has averaged 23.8 points in the last five contests after scoring 26 in Tuesday's 85-79 win over Connecticut.

Fellow All-Star starter Seimone Augustus scored 21 in that contest.

Lynx guard Monica Wright will be out indefinitely after undergoing arthroscopic surgery on her right knee Thursday. Wright, who has been Minnesota's top reserve for the majority of her six-year career with the team, missed the first five games because of a strained right calf muscle and averaged 2.1 points and 11.5 minutes over seven contests.

WNBA HEAD TO HEAD

Jul 10, 2015 Score ATS Results
MIN 83 Over: 175
CHI « 92 Cover: 13
Tools: Recaps

Aug 7, 2014 Score ATS Results
CHI 64 Under: 138
MIN « 74 Cover: 1.5
Tools: Recaps

May 26, 2014 Score ATS Results
MIN « 75 Cover: 4
CHI 72 Under: 147
Tools: Recaps
 
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Shock-Stars Preview

The Tulsa Shock and San Antonio Stars have already dealt with their fair share of significant injuries this season.

With a slightly healthier group, Tulsa will try for a fourth straight victory in the series Friday night at San Antonio.

The Shock (10-5) failed to win a third consecutive game Wednesday, falling 83-80 at Indiana despite Riquna Williams' season-high 31 points and seven rebounds.

Williams is averaging 15.2 points but has scored at least 22 in four of six, and her recent aggressiveness becomes especially crucial with Skylar Diggins sidelined for the rest of the season with a torn ACL.

Odyssey Sims scored eight points in her second game back from a knee injury.

San Antonio (3-11) has dropped five of six and three straight, with the last two defeats by a combined 33 points. Averaging 70.0 points, the Stars are the league's second-lowest scoring team.

They fell 84-68 at New York on Wednesday. Danielle Robinson scored a team-high 18 as San Antonio had just nine players available. Kayla McBride (foot), the club's leading scorer with 14.0 points per game, and Jia Perkins (calf), who averages 12.1, missed their fourth straight games.

Forward Alex Montgomery has been limited to three games, not playing since June 20 due to an injured right knee.

"We knew we were going to be young, but we did not know we were going to be injured," coach Dan Hughes said. "You take your two leading scorers (McBride and Perkins), and never have had Alex Montgomery this season.

"We thought that we would have a chance about 10-15 games in to kind of take a young core and move it to a certain spot, but the problem has obviously been injuries has gotten in the way of developing that core."

While the Stars remain winless on the road, they're 3-3 at home.

Tulsa won the season's first two meetings June 14 and 16, including a 27-point home victory. San Antonio shot a combined 34.1 percent and was outrebounded 100-51. Diggins totaled 34 points.

The Stars are shooting a league-worst 25.1 percent from 3-point range, while Tulsa ranks third at 35.5 percent.
 
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CFL

Dunkel

Week 4

Edmonton @ Ottawa

Game 323-324
July 17, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

Dunkel Rating:
Edmonton
126.444
Ottawa
107.531
Dunkel Team:
Dunkel Line:
Dunkel Total:
Edmonton
by 19
44
Vegas Team:
Vegas Line:
Vegas Total:
Edmonton
by 3 1/2
49
Dunkel Pick:
Edmonton
(-3 1/2); Under


BC Lions @ Saskatchewan

Game 325-326
July 17, 2015 @ 10:00 pm

Dunkel Rating:
BC Lions
109.100
Saskatchewan
114.531
Dunkel Team:
Dunkel Line:
Dunkel Total:
Saskatchewan
by 5 1/2
46
Vegas Team:
Vegas Line:
Vegas Total:
Saskatchewan
by 3 1/2
51 1/2
Dunkel Pick:
BC Lions
(-3 1/2); Under
 
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CFL

Long Sheet

FrIday, July 17

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

EDMONTON (1 - 1) at OTTAWA (2 - 1) - 7/17/2015, 7:05 PM
There are no Top Trends with records of significance that apply to this game.

Head-to-Head Series History
EDMONTON is 2-1 against the spread versus OTTAWA over the last 3 seasons
EDMONTON is 3-0 straight up against OTTAWA over the last 3 seasons
2 of 3 games in this series have gone UNDER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BRITISH COLUMBIA (1 - 1) at SASKATCHEWAN (0 - 3) - 7/17/2015, 10:05 PM
Top Trends for this game.
SASKATCHEWAN is 50-28 ATS (+19.2 Units) in July games since 1996.
SASKATCHEWAN is 105-71 ATS (+26.9 Units) revenging a loss versus opponent since 1996.
BRITISH COLUMBIA is 50-26 ATS (+21.4 Units) as an underdog of 3.5 to 9.5 points since 1996.
BRITISH COLUMBIA is 33-18 ATS (+13.2 Units) as a road underdog of 3.5 to 7 points since 1996.

Head-to-Head Series History
SASKATCHEWAN is 3-3 against the spread versus BRITISH COLUMBIA over the last 3 seasons
SASKATCHEWAN is 4-3 straight up against BRITISH COLUMBIA over the last 3 seasons
5 of 7 games in this series have gone UNDER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons
 
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CFL

Week 4

Edmonton (1-1) @ Ottawa (2-1)-- Ottawa won first two games as underdogs, allowing 16 ppg, but Eskimos were coming off a bye, smoked RedBlacks 46-17 last week, it was 36-11 at half; Edmonton outgained them 376-221 after they beat Ottawa 27-11/10-8 in two meetings LY. Eskimos were outgained 484-259 in opening 26-11 loss at Toronto; they've turned ball over eight times in two games (-3). Ottawa threw six INTs in its first three games.

British Columbia (1-1) @ Saskatchewan (0-3)-- Roughriders are 0-3 despite leading all three games in 4th quarter; they lost last two games in OT- they were outgained 480-442 last week in Vancouver. Riders led 17-10/7-6 at half last two weeks, allowed 32-29 points after the half. Saskatchewan won four of last six series games; under is now 14-3 in last 17 series games. Lions scored 7-6 points in first half of first two games- they lost road opener at Ottawa.
 
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CFL

Week 4

Trend Report
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Friday, July 17

7:00 PM
EDMONTON vs. OTTAWA
Edmonton is 4-1 SU in its last 5 games when playing on the road against Ottawa
Edmonton is 1-4 ATS in its last 5 games when playing on the road against Ottawa
Ottawa is 3-14 SU in its last 17 games
The total has gone UNDER in 6 of Ottawa's last 8 games at home

10:00 PM
BRITISH COLUMBIA vs. SASKATCHEWAN
The total has gone UNDER in 12 of British Columbia's last 14 games when playing Saskatchewan
British Columbia is 2-4 SU in its last 6 games when playing on the road against Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan is 4-2 SU in its last 6 games when playing British Columbia
Saskatchewan is 5-11 ATS in its last 16 games when playing British Columbia
 
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CFL Betting Notes - Week 4

Week 3 Betting Recap

The underdogs dominated the first two weeks of the 2015 CFL regular season with a number of stunning upsets, but it was a mixed bag of results in Week 3.

Edmonton got things started last Thursday night with a 47-17 rout of Ottawa as a seven-point home favorite. In the first of two Friday games, Winnipeg got past Montreal 25-23 but it could not cover as a three-point home favorite. Later that night, British Columbia also closed as a three-point favorite at home and it snuck past Saskatchewan 35-32 in overtime for the PUSH. Week 3 closed things out on Monday with Calgary holding off Toronto 25-20, but failing to cover as an eight-point home favorite.

Opening odds provided by 5dimes.

Friday, July 17

Edmonton Eskimos (1-1 SU, 1-1 ATS) vs. Ottawa RedBlacks (2-1 SU, 2-1 ATS)
Point-spread: Edmonton -3 ½
Total: 49

Game Overview

Edmonton returned to form in the opener of this home-and-home series after losing to Toronto 26-11 on the road in Week 1 as a 7 ½-point road favorite. Matt Nichols took over the reins at quarterback for an injured Mike Reilly and threw for 212 yards and three touchdowns in the win against the RedBlacks last Thursday.

The RedBlacks equaled last season’s two-game win total in the first two weeks of this season with victories against Montreal on the road and British Columbia at home both straight-up and ATS. The total stayed UNDER in those two wins before going OVER the 45 ½-point closing line in Thursday’s loss.

Betting Trends

The Eskimos have now won all three meetings against the expansion RedBlacks SU dating back to last season. They also have a 2-1 edge ATS and the total had stayed UNDER in both games in 2014.

British Columbia Lions (1-1 SU, 1-0-1 ATS) vs. Saskatchewan Roughriders (0-3 SU, 0-2-1 ATS)
Point-spread: Saskatchewan -3 ½
Total: 50 ½

Game Overview

The Lions evened their SU record on the year with last week’s win in this home-and-home series after getting stunned by Ottawa in their season opener. Travis Lulay looked sharp at quarterback in last Friday’s win by throwing for 404 yards and three scores while completing 34-of-44 attempts. Austin Collie and Andrew Harris combined for 12 receptions for 158 yards and one score in that game.

Saskatchewan has dug itself into an early 0-3 hole following the loss of quarterback Darian Durant in Week 1 with a season-ending ankle injury. In his place, Kevin Glenn has thrown for a CFL-high 868 yards while completing an impressive 79.3 percent of his 87 attempts, but this has yet to translate to victories on the field. The Roughriders have allowed an average of 35.7 points in those three losses.

Betting Trends

BC has now won the last three meetings SU, but it is just 1-3-2 ATS in the last six games between the two. The total has stayed UNDER in six of the last seven games in Saskatchewan.

Saturday, July 18

Winnipeg Blue Bombers (2-1 SU, 1-1-1 ATS) vs. Calgary Stampeders (2-1 SU, 0-3 ATS)
Point-spread: Calgary -10
Total: 53

Game Overview

The Blue Bombers are off to a solid 2-1 SU start behind an offense that has averaged 27 points through their first three games. This is a huge turnaround from a unit that failed to score more than 23 points in any of its final seven games last year. Quarterback Drew Willy was back in the lineup on Friday night and he completed 20-of-29 attempts for 251 yards.

Calgary closed out Week 3 with a tight victory over the Argonauts to bounce back from a stunning 29-11 loss to Montreal the week before as a 9 ½-point road favorite. The Stampeders got a big effort from wide receiver Eric Rogers on Monday night with six receptions for 114 yards and a score. Quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell ended the night with 303 passing yards and two touchdown throws.

Betting Trends

Winnipeg has failed to cover in four of the last seven meetings overall and it is 3-8-1 ATS in its last 12 road games against Calgary. The total has stayed UNDER in four of their five road games against the Stampeders.
 
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CFL

Friday, July 17

Game of the day: CFL Doubleheader

Edmonton Eskimos at Ottawa Redblacks (+3.5, 48.5)

After notching their first victory of the season at the expense of the Ottawa Redblacks, the Edmonton Eskimos look to complete a home-and-home sweep when the clubs reconvene in the nation's capital on Friday. Matt Nichols made the most of his debut with Mike Reilly sidelined 10-12 weeks with a knee injury, going 12-of-21 for 212 yards and three touchdowns in a convincing 46-17 victory on July 10.

Adarius Bowman stepped up in lieu of injuries to both Reilly and running back John White (season-ending ruptured Achilles tendon), reeling in five catches for 120 yards and a touchdown as Edmonton emerged victorious following its early bye week. The Eskimos reverted to the form that made them the league's top defence in 2014 by limiting Ottawa to just 25 yards rushing while also taking advantage of 13 penalties for 139 yards in the win. "You don't win the Grey Cup in July, you don't lose the Grey Cup in July," Redblacks wide receiver Maurice Price told the Ottawa Citizen after the team surrendered its highest point total in its 21 regular-season games to date. "There's no sense in dwelling on it and letting it hang around. Just put it behind you and move on."

TV: 7 p.m. ET, TSN, RDS, ESPN3

LINE HISTORY: There has been no movement on either the spread or total since open.

INJURY REPORT: Eskimos - DT Gregory Alexandre (Ques), WR Wallace Miles (Ques), DE Elie Ngoyi (Ques) Redblacks - QB Brock Jensen (Ques), WR Khalil Paden (Ques), DB Forrest Hightower (Ques), RB Jeremiah Johnson (Ques), Justin Capicciotti (Ques)

ABOUT THE ESKIMOS (1-1 SU, 1-1 ATS, 1-1 O/U): Coach Chris Jones admittedly was impressed after watching rookie cornerback John Ojo's momentum-turning interception for a touchdown in the first meeting. "What I liked most about it was when the opportunity presented itself, John had the wherewithal and the ability to finish," Jones told the Edmonton Journal on Monday. "Instinctually, he's playing corner. He was a natural safety in college (at Florida A&M), so he's still learning the position, but certainly he still brings everything we look for as far as physical attributes."

ABOUT THE REDBLACKS (2-1 SU, 2-1 ATS, 1-2 O/U): After throwing for 559 yards and four touchdowns in wins over Montreal and B.C., Henry Burris stumbled out of the blocks in the first meeting with the Eskimos. Burris tossed the interception by Ojo and completed just 20-of-36 passes for 162 yards before being pulled in the third quarter. "That pick-six was uncontested," coach Rick Campbell said. "Then, we took so many penalties in the first half ... it's hard to play winning football that way."

TRENDS:

*Eskimos are 6-2 ATS in their last 8 games following a ATS win.
*Under is 10-4-1 in RedBlacks last 15 games overall.
*Under is 12-2 in Eskimos last 14 games following a ATS win.

CONSENSUS: 57 percent of the public is backing the Eskimos with 50.5 percent on the over.



BC Lions at Saskatchewan Roughriders (-3.5, 51.5)

The Saskatchewan Roughriders seek their first victory of the season when they host the BC Lions on Friday. The only remaining winless team in the league, Saskatchewan has been close in each of its first three contests, losing by a total of nine points.

After opening the campaign with a four-point defeat to Winnipeg, the Roughriders dropped a two-point decision to Toronto and suffered a 35-32 setback at BC last Friday - both in overtime. The Lions rallied from a 29-18 deficit late in the fourth quarter, with rookie Richie Leone kicking his fifth field goal of the game - a club-record 56-yarder - with 15 seconds remaining before Travis Lulay hit Manny Arceneaux with a 4-yard pass in overtime for the winning score. "To be able to come back like that says a lot about our team," said BC first-year coach Jeff Tedford, who notched his initial CFL win. "I was so proud of the guys."

TV: 10 p.m. ET, TSN, RDS, ESPN3

LINE HISTORY: Initially the Roughriders were favored by three points, but have shifted to -3.5. The total has jumped a full point since opening at 50.5 and is now 51.5.

INJURY REPORT: Lions - SB Courtney Taylor (Prob), G Cody Husband (Ques), DB Ryan Phillips (Ques), LB Jason Arakgi (Doub) Roughriders - LB Shea Emry (Ques)

ABOUT THE LIONS (1-1 SU, 1-1 ATS, 1-1 O/U): Safety Eric Fraser has returned home, as the native of Burnaby was signed by BC on Tuesday. A product of Central Michigan, Fraser spent four seasons with Calgary after being selected in the first round of the 2010 draft. The 28-year-old was taken by Ottawa in the expansion draft following the 2013 season but was cut by the Redblacks during this year's training camp.

ABOUT THE ROUGHRIDERS (0-3 SU, 0-3 ATS, 3-0 O/U): With Weldon Brown nursing a shoulder injury, Saskatchewan also added to its defensive backfield Tuesday by signing cornerback Geoff Tisdale. A former All-Star, Tisdale has collected 29 interceptions - four for touchdowns - in 114 career games with Hamilton, Calgary and Montreal. The Roughriders also signed cornerback Paul Woldu, who was released after the preseason, to the practice squad.

TRENDS:

*Lions are 0-4-2 ATS in their last 6 games overall.
*Roughriders are 1-7 ATS in their last 8 home games.
*Under is 36-15 in the last 51 meetings.

CONSENSUS: 57.3 percent of the users are backing the 'Riders with 61 percent on the over.
 
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Who's hurting? Health status of all 30 MLB teams
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The National League East qualifies as baseball's black-and-blue division at the All-Star break.

The first-place Washington Nationals have eight players on the disabled list, including right-hander Stephen Strasburg, right fielder Jayson Werth, center fielder Denard Span, first baseman Ryan Zimmerman and second baseman Anthony Rendon.

The second-place New York Mets are even more banged up. Their 10-player DL features third baseman David Wright, catcher Travis d'Arnaud, right-handers Zack Wheeler and Steven Matz and left-handed reliever Jerry Blevins.

The third-place Atlanta Braves also have 10 players on the DL, including starting pitchers Mike Minor and Bronson Arroyo, first baseman Freddie Freeman and closer Jason Grilli.

Even the division's also-rans, the Miami Marlins (right fielder Giancarlo Stanton and second baseman Dee Gordon) and the Philadelphia Phillies (left-hander Cliff Lee and second baseman Chase Utley) are without several mainstays.

The Sports Xchange asked its 30 baseball correspondents to assess the local team's injury status at midseason. The team-by-team rundown:

NATIONAL LEAGUE WEST

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS

The Diamondbacks will be about as healthy as they have been all season with the imminent return of their leadoff hitter, Ender Inciarte. The outfielder, who strained his right hamstring June 15, is expected back after the break. When healthy, he is table-setter ahead of the middle of the order, so he was missed. Injuries forced the D-backs to use six catchers the first half, but they appear to have found their man in Welington Castillo, who has five homers in 83 at-bats. There is no timetable for the return of RHP Archie Bradley (shoulder), who beat Dodgers LHP Clayton Kershaw in his first major league start in April.

COLORADO ROCKIES

1B Justin Morneau hasn't played since May 13, when he made a diving attempt for a ground ball and experienced whiplash that left him with a cervical strain and concussion symptoms. Morneau had a concussion in 2010 and concussion symptoms the following year. The Rockies don't know when or if Morneau will return this season. He has made improvement but has yet to resume baseball activities. LF Corey Dickerson is on the disabled list for the second time this season with plantar fasciitis in his left foot. Dickerson is running in cleats, and he said he recently simulated running the bases.

LOS ANGELES DODGERS

The Dodgers sustained their most costly injuries early in the season when LHP Hyun-Jin Ryu (shoulder) and RHP Brandon McCarthy (elbow) underwent season-ending surgeries. The team made do with RHPs Mike Bolsinger and Carlos Frias in the rotation for most of the first half, but it needs to upgrade there before the trade deadline. Elsewhere, Carl Crawford should return from a torn oblique muscle soon and rejoin the outfield mix.

SAN DIEGO PADRES

Injuries hit the Padres hard. OF/1B Wil Myers has already missed 54 games and is at least a month away following wrist surgery. RHP Brandon Morrow has been on the disabled list since May 3 with shoulder inflammation and is almost ready to start a second rehab assignment. RHP Josh Johnson and LHP Cory Luebke both experienced setbacks recently in their rehabs from round two of Tommy John surgery. C Derek Norris is playing with shoulder and knee injuries.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS

The Giants went into the All-Star break with four contributors -- LF Nori Aoki, RHP Tim Hudson, RHP Tim Lincecum, and LHP Jeremy Affeldt -- on the disabled list. None of the injuries is considered serious, and all are expected to be well rested and ready for reinstatement by Aug. 1 at the latest. All four of them have been sidelined since late June, and the Giants endured a seven-game losing streak from June 30-July 6 before bouncing back to win four of their last five games prior to the All-Star break.


NATIONAL LEAGUE CENTRAL

CHICAGO CUBS

INF Tommy La Stella appeared in only two games for the Cubs before sustaining a right oblique injury. He was moved to the 60-day disabled list last week and doesn't seem likely to be back anytime soon. LHPs Zac Rosscup (inflamed left shoulder) and Tsuyoshi Wada (left deltoid inflammation) also remain sidelined, but for the most part, the Cubs are a relatively healthy team heading into the second half of the season.

CINCINNATI REDS

The Reds began the season in relatively good health, but by mid-June, they had nine players on the disabled list, including RHP Homer Bailey, SS Zack Cozart, and C Devin Mesoraco, who are lost for the season. Bailey began the season on the DL following Tommy John surgery, and he sustained an unrelated elbow injury after making just two starts in his return. Since Opening Day, 10 Reds players have made 11 appearances on the DL.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS

The situation is improving. RHP Wily Peralta (oblique) and RHP Matt Garza (right shoulder tendinitis) are due back after the All-Star break. Injuries have been a problem for the Brewers -- Milwaukee was without CF Carlos Gomez, C Jonathan Lucroy, SS Jean Segura, 2B Scooter Gennett and OF Khris Davis -- for stretches during the first half, but even when those players were healthy, they weren't playing up to their averages.

PITTSBURGH PIRATES

The Pirates are relatively healthy beyond Josh Harrison, who is being replaced in the leadoff spot of the batting order by RF Gregory Polanco. Harrison sustained a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his left thumb in early July, and he underwent surgery July 8. He is expected to be out until late August. Five other Pittsburgh players are on the disabled list, but none of them were projected to be major contributors.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS

Injuries have been a factor since day one, St. Louis losing 217 man-games to injury off its Opening Day roster. At one point in June, 20 percent of its 25-man roster from April 5 was serving DL time. The loss of guys like RHP Adam Wainwright, RHP Jordan Walden, LF Matt Holliday and 1B Matt Adams hasn't cost this team as dearly as most felt it would, although it is not a deep team at this point. Holliday and Walden could be back before July is over, as could LHP Jaime Garcia.


NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST

ATLANTA BRAVES

The Braves lost LHP Mike Minor for the season with shoulder woes, but they were otherwise free of major long-term injuries until closer Jason Grilli went down for the season last weekend with a ruptured Achilles tendon. 1B Freddie Freeman's wrist injury could linger, though, and that would be a major problem. The Braves are much better stocked to avoid losses in the pitching staff than with their position players. The organization is extremely short of power bats.

MIAMI MARLINS

The Marlins shouldn't use injuries as a complete crutch -- there are plenty of examples of players who under-performed while perfectly healthy, a list that includes closer Steve Cishek, CF Marcell Ozuna, 1B Michael Morse (before he got hurt), RHP Mat Latos and long-gone C Jarrod Saltalamacchia, just to name a few. But, to be fair, the Marlins did not enjoy even one day when their two best players, RHP Jose Fernandez and RF Giancarlo Stanton, were healthy simultaneously. In addition, 2014 All-Star RHP Henderson Alvarez remains on the disabled list, and he hasn't been himself all year. All-Star 2B Dee Gordon dislocated his left thumb Saturday and could miss a couple of weeks.

NEW YORK METS

Not good. The Mets didn't begin the year with much depth, and they hit the All-Star break with 10 players on the disabled list and at least two more, Cuddyer and CF Juan Lagares, playing through injuries that clearly are hampering their play. Anything the Mets get in the second half from 3B David Wright, C Travis d'Arnaud and LHP Jerry Blevins -- a reliever who threw 5 1/3 perfect innings before suffering a broken forearm on April 19 -- will be a bonus.

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES

Keep an eye on 2B Chase Utley. The 36-year-old, hitting .179 and stomaching the worst season of his decorated career, will return at some point after the All-Star break. There is no timetable, but the bigger question is what will be Utley's role when he gets back on the field? On July 7 in Los Angeles, Amaro was asked by reporters if Utley would be the primary second baseman once healthy, and he responded candidly. "Not for me he's not," Amaro said. "Cesar Hernandez is our best second baseman. I would assume that Cesar would be our second baseman. I think that's fair."

WASHINGTON NATIONALS

The Nationals are pretty much the walking wounded at this point, with key members of the starting lineup and rotation having missed major time this season. If players like OF Jayson Werth, 1B Ryan Zimmerman and 2B Anthony Rendon can begin playing every day, it would be like the team making a major trade. RHP Stephen Strasburg is expected to return in the second half from an oblique injury, and the hope is he can retain some of the strong form he was showing before being sidelined.


AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST

HOUSTON ASTROS

The Astros will welcome INF Jed Lowrie (thumb) and RHP Scott Feldman (knee) back from the disabled list in the near future. The same doesn't hold true for OF George Springer, who fractured his right wrist July 1 and is expected to miss at least six weeks despite not needing surgery. And while the Astros have tapped their farm system to supplement their outfield depth (Preston Tucker, Domingo Santana, Alex Presley, L.J. Hoes), Springer will continue to be missed until he returns.

LOS ANGELES ANGELS

The Angels weathered the few injuries they sustained this year. Among the current core players, only RHP Jered Weaver spent time on the disabled list. LHP Andrew Heaney pitched well enough in Weaver's absence to merit consideration as a full-time starter. RHPs Mike Morin and Corey Rasmus, both relievers, have not been missed. However, Collin Cowgill's sprained right hand, an injury that landed the outfielder on the disabled list, hurts the Angels' depth at their most vulnerable position. When OF Josh Hamilton missed the first two months last season because of a torn thumb ligament, Cowgill batted .287 during that time while providing alert defense.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

The A's hoped to tread water through the All-Star break, then get two big-time shots in the arm with the possible returns of injured RHPs Jarrod Parker and A.J. Griffin. At least half of that isn't going to happen. Parker reinjured his surgically repaired right elbow and had his clock reset for 2016. Griffin could return from his own elbow surgery later this month, but now he is bothered by a sore shoulder. It never ends. OF Coco Crisp (cervical strain), like Parker a big-time question mark, and closer Sean Doolittle (strained shoulder) complete the grand slam of critical A's injuries that crippled not only the team's first half but also any possible resurgence after the All-Star break.

SEATTLE MARINERS

Seattle's only significant injuries came to a rotation that thus far has been able to overcome. The maturity of RHP Taijuan Walker and the unexpected rise of rookie LHP Mike Montgomery helped the Mariners move on without RHP Hisashi Iwakuma and LHP James Paxton. Iwakuma is back, while Paxton's injury has lingered. Thanks in large part to Montgomery, that hasn't been a huge factor. Losing LHP Charlie Furbush, the team's most consistent reliever, just before the All-Star break was a big blow, but he should be back before long.

TEXAS RANGERS

The Rangers were dealt a big blow to their rotation in spring training when RHP Yu Darvish was lost for the season to Tommy John surgery. Then they lost LHP Derek Holland to a strained muscle after one start, and he hasn't pitched since April 10. The good news for Texas is that another pitcher returning from Tommy John surgery, LHP Martin Perez, is scheduled to join the rotation Friday. He was a front-of-the rotation starter before getting hurt last season. Holland should give the team a boost when he returns in August, too.


AMERICAN LEAGUE CENTRAL

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

The White Sox rested 1B Jose Abreu on Sunday to help allow a sore leg and right index finger to heal. Part of a White Sox's decline in power can be attributed to relative struggles by the 2014 AL Rookie of the Year. Entering the All-Star break, he had 14 home runs and a .492 slugging percentage. Last year this time he had 29 homers and a .630 slugging numbers. Abreu's average is .296, about the same as last year. Two injured relievers, RHPs Matt Albers and Nate Jones, could return from the disabled list in the next few weeks.

CLEVELAND INDIANS

OF Nick Swisher, out since June 14 due to left knee inflammation, is progressing toward a minor league rehab assignment, but there is no firm timetable for his return. The Indians' struggling offense could use a boost, but it won't likely come from Swisher even when he does come back. When he went on the DL he was hitting .198 with two home runs and eight RBIs. LHP Nick Hagadone (lower back strain) is expected to begin a minor league rehab assignment Wednesday. The Indians miss him since he is the No. 2 lefty in the bullpen. RHP Josh Tomlin (right shoulder surgery) is due to make at least three more rehab starts before he is activated.

DETROIT TIGERS

The loss of 1B Miguel Cabrera to a severe left calf injury will take its toll over the five to seven weeks remaining until he returns but the solid hitting of DH Victor Martinez since he missed more than a month with left knee inflammation plus solid production by OFs Yoenis Cespedes and J.D. Martinez has minimized his loss in the short term. RHP Justin Verlander, who missed more than two months with a right triceps problem, turned in a solid start prior to the break and C Alex Avila has looked good over the two weeks since he came back from a knee problem. The graying of Detroit's roster means injuries cannot be unexpected.

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

Alex Gordon's groin injury was a severe blow to the club. Gordon is the best defensive left fielder in the majors. Jarrod Dyson and rookie Paulo Orlando will platoon in left until Gordon returns, but Gordon is irreplaceable. The rotation should be getting healthier. LHP Jason Vargas should be back soon after the break. Also, RHP Kevin Medlen, who won 15 games in 2013 for the Braves but sat out last year after Tommy John surgery, has been rehabbing in the minors and could be major league ready in July.

MINNESOTA TWINS

Unlike years past, Minnesota remained relatively healthy in the first half. Where the Twins have sustained injuries, they were able to weather them because of depth at those spots. RHP Ricky Nolasco was scheduled to undergo right ankle surgery this week, and there is no timetable for his return. Fortunately for the club, there are several options who are capable fill-ins. CF Byron Buxton struggled before hitting the 15-day disabled list with a strained thumb, but is likely to return later this month. Whether it is with the Twins or with Triple-A Rochester is anyone's guess.


AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

Injuries to SS J.J. Hardy, 2B Jonathan Schoop and C Matt Wieters kept each out for extended periods in the first half, and that really hurt the team on both offense and defense. Schoop just returned a week ago, and that makes the Orioles extremely strong up the middle. Wieters, recovering from Tommy John surgery, has been catching every other day and when he goes daily, that will help also. CF Adam Jones remained banged up, but overall the Orioles are much healthier now.

BOSTON RED SOX

2B Dustin Pedroia (hamstring) is poised to return Friday night in Anaheim, which figures to give the offense another lift. However, RHP Clay Buchholz (elbow) went on the disabled list last weekend, and he won't so much as throw a ball for another week. That is a significant blow to an already pitching-needy team. OF/1B Daniel Nava (thumb), C Blake Swihart (foot) and RHP Heath Hembree (shoulder) are all on minor league rehab assignments.

NEW YORK YANKEES

For the most part, the Yankees have avoided significant injuries this year even though OF Jacoby Ellsbury missed a month and a half and RHP Masahiro Tanaka missed a month. Players with question marks due to age or recent injury history have stayed healthy. LHP CC Sabathia's knee is fine even if his ERA is not. 1B Mark Teixeira's wrist healed, RHP Michael Pineda has not had any shoulder issues, and the only health issue with DH Alex Rodriguez was a minor case of "tired legs" in May. The only regular currently on the disabled list is RF Carlos Beltran, who is expected to return this weekend from an oblique injury.

TAMPA BAY RAYS

The Rays' injury concerns improved massively in the last two weeks, with LHP Matt Moore and RHP Jake Odorizzi returning to the rotation and two key bats returning, C John Jaso and 1B James Loney. Rookie OF Steven Souza will be back soon, and the team could get LHP Drew Smyly and OF Desmond Jennings back in August, though the key concern is just not losing any players to injuries in the second half. However, Tampa Bay lost SS Asdrubal Cabrera to the disabled list Sunday due to a strained right hamstring.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

RHP Aaron Sanchez started to emerge as a key part of the rotation when he was lost with a strained right lat after his June 5 start. His possible late-July return would be welcome, either in the rotation or the bullpen, if he can recapture his May form. LF Michael Saunders could return in August, although there is no timetable set. He required surgery to remove part of his left meniscus after he stepped on a sprinkler head during spring training in late February. He made a premature comeback in May and returned to the disabled list with a bone bruise in the knee.
 

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