From the archives: March 2010
Outfielder Corey Patterson ended his tryout with the Seattle Mariners on Wednesday, opting out of his contract for free agency.
The 29-year-old Patterson, who has played in parts of 10 big league seasons, agreed in November to a minor league contact with the Mariners and had the right to be released on seven days' notice if not put on the 25-man roster. If he had been put on the big league roster, he would have received a $650,000, one-year deal.
Patterson appeared in 19 games this spring, and batted .216 (8 for 37) with two doubles, two home runs and two RBIs.
In 1007 games, Patterson hit .252 with 104 homers and 363 RBIs with five teams. He made his major league debut with the Cubs when he was a highly regarded 20-year-old prospect.
-- The Associated Press
GUZMAN SOLID IN FIRST START AT 2B (6:47 p.m. ET)
Cristian Guzman made his first start at second base since losing the shortstop job to rookie Ian Desmond and helped turn two double plays in the Washington Nationals' 9-6 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Wednesday.
Guzman also went 3 for 4 with two doubles and two RBIs.
Guzman has played 1,272 games, all at shortstop. Manager Jim Riggleman said Guzman will be "somewhat of a utility player, but more than that."
"We really don't have too much concern that he's a problem over there, but if we did he alleviated that today," Riggleman said.
Nationals infield coach Pat Listach said the most difficult adjustment is turning the double play.
"He's got to get used to not seeing the runner," Listach said. "He's going to be fine over there. It looked like he's been there his whole life."
-- The Associated Press
INDIANS SHIP SOWERS TO COLUMBUS (2:57 p.m. ET)
The Cleveland Indians have sent left-hander Jeremy Sowers outright to Triple-A Columbus.
The team's first-round draft choice in 2004 was one of three players optioned to Triple-A, along with outfielder Trevor Crowe and catcher Wyatt Toregas.
Right-hander Hector Ambriz placed on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to Saturday.
Sowers had a sore shoulder early in spring training, which put him behind in the competition for a roster spot. The 26-year-old is out of options and could not be sent back to the minors without going on waivers.
Sowers, drafted sixth overall out of Vanderbilt, has an 18-30 record and 5.18 ERA in 72 career games.
-- The Associated Press
LARUE DAY TO DAY WITH HAND INJURY (2:57 p.m. ET)
Catcher Jason LaRue is only suffering from a "deep bone bruise" and is "day to day," Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on Wednesday.
The Cardinals -- who are already without catcher Yadier Molina, who has a strained right oblique muscle -- had thought they might also lose LaRue for an extended period of time after he suffered an injury to his left hand in a tag play at the plate against the New York Mets on Tuesday. But Mozeliak said LaRue, who had an MRI on Wednesday morning, likely won't need to be placed on the disabled list.
"I had visions of a broken hand -- that was the worst case -- to what we're talking about right now," Mozeliak told the Post-Dispatch. "Emotionally, it was up and down."
Molina had his best workout since being injured Wednesday morning and said he felt no pain. Manager Tony La Russa told the Post-Dispatch that he thinks Molina could play on Opening Day; if he isn't ready Monday, he could be placed on the DL retroactive to March 26, which would make him eligible to play on April 11.
-- ESPN.com news services
THOMAS SHIFTED TO TOLEDO (2:11 p.m. ET)
The Detroit Tigers completed their Opening Day roster, sending outfielder Clete Thomas to Triple-A Toledo.
That move puts utility player Don Kelly on the team.
An MRI exam showed Thomas' right shoulder is bruised, but manager Jim Leyland says the injury won't prevent him from being a designated hitter for the Mud Hens.
-- The Associated Press
TWINS SEND RAMOS, PERKINS TO TRIPLE-A (12:21 p.m. ET)
Minnesota Twins catcher Wilson Ramos and left-hander Glen Perkins will start the season in Triple-A.
The Twins optioned both players to Rochester on Wednesday. Ramos is a promising prospect who hit .400 this spring, including a home run on Tuesday over a 35-foot high wall behind the center field fence.
But with Joe Mauer entrenched as the starter, the Twins want Ramos to play every day. Drew Butera will be the backup.
Perkins has been bothered by a sore back. He went 6-7 with a 5.89 ERA last season for the Twins.
Right-handed reliever Pat Neshek, who missed all of last season after Tommy John surgery, has made the roster.
-- The Associated Press
Arizona Diamondbacks manager A.J. Hinch has picked Rodrigo Lopez as the team's fourth starter.
Lopez, a non-roster invitee to spring training, outpitched Billy Buckner and Kevin Mulvey for the job. The 34-year-old right-hander underwent Tommy John elbow surgery in 2007.
Buckner and Mulvey were optioned to Triple-A Reno, as were first baseman Brandon Allen and outfielder Cole Gillespie. Catcher Sean Coughlin was reassigned to the minor league camp.
Lopez is 1-0 with a 2.35 ERA in 15 1/3 innings this spring. He has one more start Friday night against the Chicago Cubs at Chase Field in Phoenix. Lopez has a 68-66 major league career record with San Diego, Baltimore, Colorado and Philadelphia.
Arizona will begin the season with four starters because a fifth won't be needed until mid-April.
-- The Associated Press
PEREZ STRUGGLES; METS TO KEEP AN EYE ON PROGRESS (6:32 p.m. ET)

Oliver Perez isn't concerned about a rough outing in his last spring training game.
The New York Mets, however, will be keeping a close eye on him as the season starts next week.
The St. Louis Cardinals ripped three home runs off Perez in Tuesday's 9-4 win over the Mets, and the left-hander lasted 2 1/3 innings.
Perez, who is coming back from Sept. 1 knee surgery, surrendered seven runs, six hits and two walks, while fanning three.
Ryan Ludwick hit a two-run homer in the first inning, and Matt Holliday immediately followed with the first of two homers on the day.
Mets manager Jerry Manuel said Perez, who is 0-1 with an 8.66 ERA this spring, might be going through a dead-arm period, and it wouldn't be fair to say he is on a short leash based on results that don't count.
"Obviously you would like to see better going into the season, so he's just a guy we have to watch carefully," Manuel said. "I sense that he is healthy. I don't think there are any issues there, so hopefully when the lights come on, he shows us a little better stuff."
-- The Associated Press
AMBIDEXTROUS VENDITTE THROWS FOR YANKEES (6:23 p.m. ET)
Ambidextrous pitcher Pat Venditte threw with both arms for the New York Yankees on Tuesday, giving up one run in 1 1/3 innings during a 9-6 split-squad loss to the Atlanta Braves.
Making his first appearance for the Yankees, Venditte took over for CC Sabathia with two outs in the fifth inning and tossed four warmup pitches with each hand. Venditte switched back and forth, depending on whether he was facing a righty or lefty, and gave up two hits and a walk.
The 24-year-old reliever, who uses a six-finger glove, pitched for two teams in Class A last season and went a combined 4-2 with 22 saves and a 1.87 ERA. He is scheduled to begin the season at Class A Tampa.
Sabathia said he knew the Yankees had an ambidextrous pitcher in their organization, but did a double take when Venditte took the mound.
"I've never seen anything like that," Sabathia said. "I felt like we kept changing pitchers before I figured out what was happening."
-- The Associated Press
WILLIS STRUGGLES, BUT EARNS SPOT IN TIGERS' ROTATION (6:11 p.m. ET)
Dontrelle Willis just completed his worst outing of spring training when Detroit Tigers manager Jim Leyland stepped to the mound and told the left-hander something that made him feel much better: Willis will open the season as part of Detroit's opening rotation.
Despite struggling Tuesday in a 10-9 win over the Baltimore Orioles, Willis will be the No. 3 man in the rotation. His position became solidified earlier in the day, when the Tigers traded left-hander Nate Robertson to Florida.
Willis gave up five runs, seven hits and four walks in 4 1/3 innings. The performance lifted his ERA from 1.20 to 3.26, but Leyland said the lefty wasn't nearly as erratic as his pitching line would indicate.
"I thought he was very good today. I don't think that was anything like we've seen in the past," Leyland said. "He was missing down, he was missing close."
"I was actually very pleased with it. I was very encouraged," he said.
-- The Associated Press
BASEBALL LEAVING TUCSON BEHIND (6:07 p.m. ET)

The cradle of the Cactus League says goodbye to major league baseball this week.
The Arizona Diamondbacks and Colorado Rockies, the final two teams with spring training in Tucson, are moving north to swanky new digs near a Scottsdale-area casino. They will leave behind empty fields of manicured grass and a history that stretches back 64 years.
On March 8, 1946, the first spring training game in Arizona was played at Tucson's Hi Corbett Field between Bill Veeck's Cleveland Indians and Horace Stoneham's New York Giants. Bob Lemon pitched the Indians to a 3-1 victory.
That venerable stadium, built in 1937, will host Tucson's final spring game, between the Diamondbacks and Rockies, on Wednesday. The Diamondbacks played their last game at their Tucson Electric Park home on Tuesday.
"I feel a little sad because we're not going to have this here," said 78-year-old Lefty Provencio, one of the legion of mostly older folks who help out at the ballparks for nothing each spring. "It's been something I've been volunteering for since I retired."
-- The Associated Press
KARSTEN AMONG PIRATES' CUTS (12:10 p.m. ET)
Right-handers Jeff Karstens and Brian Bass were among seven players reassigned by the Pittsburgh Pirates to their minor league camp, leaving 30 players with the major league club.
Also sent down were right-handers Vinnie Chulk, Steven Jackson, Jeremy Powell and Anthony Claggett and catcher Luke Carlin.
Karstens started last season in the Pirates' rotation, going 4-6 with a 5.42 ERA in 39 games, including 13 starts. Bass pitched 86 1/3 innings last season for Baltimore -- second among AL relievers -- and was 5-3 with a 4.90 ERA.
-- The Associated Press
Jonathan Sanchez had his strongest outing of the spring Monday, giving up one run on three hits and striking out 11 in six innings as the San Francisco Giants defeated the Milwaukee Brewers 8-6.
Sanchez, who threw a no-hitter against San Diego on July 10, gave up only one hit after the first inning. Rickie Weeks homered with one out in the sixth inning.
John Bowker, making a bid for an outfield spot on the Giants' opening day roster, continued his strong hitting with his fifth home run and a double.
Bowker hit a two-run shot in the fifth inning, one of two given up by Brewers starter Dave Bush.
Eugenio Velez went deep with a man on in the first for San Francisco.
-- The Associated Press
PINEIRO DOMINATES (7:25 p.m. ET)
Joel Pineiro took a no-hitter into the sixth inning and the Los Angeles Angels defeated the Kansas City Royals 10-2 on Monday.
Pineiro worked 6 2/3 innings, his longest of five spring appearances, and allowed only two hits and a run with two walks and two strikeouts.
Over his last 15 2/3 innings, Pineiro has allowed three earned runs. His spring ERA is now 3.48.
Scott Podsednik?s lead-off double in the sixth broke up the no-hitter. Podsednik scored one out later on Rick Ankiel?s double.
Royals starter Kyle Farnsworth made his second start and fifth appearance of the spring and allowed one hit in two innings.
Royals closer Joakim Soria was hit hard, allowing four hits and four earned runs without recording an out.
-- The Associated Press
CALLASPO HURTING (5:44 p.m. ET)
Alberto Callaspo may not be ready for the Kansas City Royals season opener April 5 with Detroit because of an irritation in his right side.
Callaspo has been held out of all baseball activities since the injury, which occurred Friday while taking batting practice.
Callaspo hit .300 last season with 41 doubles and 11 home runs. He was slated to bat third and play third base.
-- The Associated Press
PIRATES TO BAT PITCHER EIGHTH (5:44 p.m. ET)
Andrew McCutchen hit one of Pittsburgh's four home runs and the Pirates unveiled their new-look batting order Monday in a 13-1 romp over the Houston Astros.
Pirates manager John Russell plans to begin the season with his pitcher hitting eighth, a move that will shift McCutchen from leadoff to second in the batting order.
With pitcher Paul Maholm in the No. 8 spot, Akinori Iwamura hit leadoff, McCutchen was in the No. 2 spot and shortstop Bobby Crosby batted ninth.
The only change Russell might make would be putting Ronny Cedeno, scratched because of lower back pain, in the lineup instead of Crosby.
Iwamura hit a three-run homer and McCutchen, Brandon Jones and Andy LaRoche had two-run shots.
"It sets us up to score more runs," Russell said. "It really seems to make a lot of sense, a way to get more guys in scoring position in front of Aki, Andrew, [Garrett] Jones and ([Ryan] Doumit. It creates good balance in the lineup."
The Pirates claimed RHP Hayden Penn off waivers from the Florida Marlins. To clear space on the 40-man roster, OF Brandon Moss was designated for assignment. The Pirates have 10 days to trade, release or waive him.
Moss, a former Red Sox prospect acquired in the Jason Bay trade in July 2008, hit .081 this spring. He hit .232 with 13 home runs and 64 RBIs in 178 games with Pittsburgh. The 25-year-old Penn was 1-0 with a 7.77 ERA in 16 games with Florida last season and is 4-6 in 30 games with the Orioles and Marlins.
For the Astros, right-handed pitcher Roy Oswalt (left hamstring tightness) was examined in Houston by Dr. Michael McCann. Oswalt received an injection in his back and will make his scheduled start Wednesday. Oswalt is expected to start as planned on Opening Day.
-- The Associated Press
CARPENTER GETS NOD; GARCIA BATTLES (5:37 p.m. ET)
Cardinals manager Tony La Russa confirmed that Chris Carpenter will start Opening Day in Cincinnati.
And Jaime Garcia kept up his bid for a spot in the St. Louis rotation, pitching six innings Monday as the Cardinals beat the Minnesota Twins.
Garcia gave up two runs and eight hits without a walk. La Russa said there probably would be an announcement about the starting staff.
"He knew what was at stake and he handled himself well," La Russa said. "He got a lot of balls on the ground and threw a good assortment of pitches."
Kyle McClellan, who was in competition with Garcia and Rich Hill for the final rotation spot, has been a valuable member of the bullpen the last two seasons with a 3.73 ERA in 134 games. He can be used in the middle to late innings.
"That's where we need him," manager Tony La Russa said. "I just don't think we have enough depth."
Said McClellan: "It's pretty obvious with [Garcia] in our rotation it's going to be a very solid rotation. I can go back to the bullpen and improve on what I've done the last two years."
Albert Pujols and Ryan Ludwick homered off Twins starter Kevin Slowey. Minor leaguer Daniel Descalso hit a two-out, two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth to win it.
-- The Associated Press
YANKEES HURLER BRIDGES GAP BETWEEN RIGHT, LEFT (2:53 p.m. ET)
Yankees minor league ambidextrous pitcher Pat Venditte is expected to pitch in his first major league spring training game during Tuesday's split-squad contest against Atlanta.
Venditte, who uses a six-finger glove, pitched at Class-A Charleston and Tampa last season, posting a combined 4-2 record with 22 saves.
Yankees manager Joe Girardi says he has wanted to see Venditte pitch all spring.
Girardi earlier this spring asked that Venditte be sent over for a big league game from the minor league complex.
Yankees Opening Day starter CC Sabathia is scheduled to start the game with the Braves.
Also, reliever Alfredo Aceves has back tightness and will not pitch for the next few days.
-- The Associated Press
METS' REYES TAKES BATTING PRACTICE (2:18 p.m. ET)
Jose Reyes is a step closer to appearing in a game for the first time this spring.
The New York Mets' shortstop took batting practice against minor league pitchers Monday morning and said the session went better than expected.
Reyes has participated in six workouts since returning to camp Wednesday, following a three-week absence with a hyperactive thyroid that prevented him from doing any physical activity.
"I didn't expect to hit the ball that hard today," Reyes said of the session. "I expected to swing at a couple and miss, but it was better than I expected."
The two-time All-Star hasn't played in a game, other than an intrasquad scrimmage, since last May when he was sidelined because of a hamstring injury.
Reyes said he still doesn't know when he will get into a game or if he will be ready for Opening Day, but he hasn't had any problems since returning.
"I haven't played since last May so I can't wait to get on the field and play with my teammates, but right now we're going to take it one day at a time and see what happens next," he said.
-- The Associated Press
MORROW RESUMES THROWING FOR BLUE JAYS (2:09 p.m. ET)
Toronto right-hander Brandon Morrow threw 52 pitches in a simulated game after being shut down for a week due to a "dead arm."
He allowed one hit, walked one and struck out four of 14 batters. He says he "felt great, could've kept going."
Morrow, projected as the No. 3 starter in the Blue Jays rotation, is scheduled to make his final spring start Saturday at Houston and said he could go five or six innings against the Astros.
He took himself out of his previous start on March 19 against Houston after experiencing soreness in his right shoulder while warming up in the bullpen.
-- The Associated Press
BEDARD RETURNS TO MOUND AT MARINERS CAMP (1:22 p.m. ET)
Erik Bedard is back on a mound for the Mariners -- albeit at less than half speed.
The oft-injured left-hander took his first step to rejoining Seattle's jumbled rotation by tossing about 20 pitches off the mound out of the stretch position Monday morning.
General manager Jack Zduriencik, special assistant Tony Blengino, manager Don Wakamatsu, pitching coach Rick Adair, two other coaches and two trainers watched the 6-minute session in a side bullpen.
The Mariners estimate Bedard could pitch again by June, though this mound work is earlier than originally expected.
Bedard joked to Zduriencik his throws were "all strikes."
-- The Associated Press
NATIONALS' FIFTH STARTER "UP IN THE AIR" (1:19 p.m. ET)
Washington Nationals manager Jim Riggleman says the team has settled on four-fifths of its starting rotation, with 1997 World Series MVP Livan Hernandez and Craig Stammen earning spots along with Opening Day starter John Lannan and Jason Marquis.
Stammen will be the team's No. 3 starter, and Hernandez earned the fourth spot after signing a minor league contract in February.
Riggleman says Monday the fifth starter's job is "up in the air," with Scott Olsen, Garrett Mock and J.D. Martin in the running.
The Nationals have some time to make a decision, because an off day early in the regular season means they won't need a fifth starter until April 11.
-- The Associated Press
Right-hander Chad Gaudin has agreed to terms with the Oakland Athletics to help shore up their injury-riddled pitching staff, three days after being released by the New York Yankees.
Gaudin was released by New York on Thursday after losing out to Phil Hughes for the No. 5 slot in the team's rotation. He is expected to take one of the spots in A's bullpen.
Oakland assistant general manager David Forst on Sunday confirmed the deal. The move was first reported by FoxSports, citing unnamed league sources.
Terms were not disclosed.
Gaudin, who previously pitched for the A's from 2006-07, struggled this spring after pitching well as a part-time starter with the Yankees in 2009. He was 0-3 with an 8.68 ERA in four outings when he was released.
-- The Associated Press
LOPEZ STATES CASE (8:24 p.m. ET)
Rodrigo Lopez made his strongest case yet for cracking the Arizona Diamondbacks rotation.
The 34-year-old right-hander blanked Milwaukee on three hits over 5 1-3 innings in the Diamondbacks' 9-1 victory Sunday. Lopez, a non-roster invitee, did not allow a run for a second straight outing and has given up one earned run over 13 1-3 innings since giving up three runs in his first spring start.
"If not the best, it's one of the best spring trainings I've ever had," Lopez said.
Former Diamondbacks left-hander Doug Davis was battered for six runs and nine hits in five innings. Miguel Montero doubled in three runs and was one of four Arizona players to get two hits off Davis.
-- The Associated Press
NADY GETS ACTION (8:02 p.m. ET)
Chicago's Xavier Nady was 0 for 3 while starting his first game in the outfield since last April, following Tommy John surgery in his elbow. The former Yankee had only one fielding play: He cautiously threw a double by Casey Kotchman back into the infield in the first.
"It felt good," Nady said. "That's all I'm supposed to do out there right now, get to the ball and throw it back into the infield. ... I want to be patient. By no means am I out there cleared to let it loose. I still have a lot of work to do."
-- The Associated Press
PADRES GO WITH GARLAND (6:36 p.m. ET)
Jon Garland has been named the San Diego Padres' Opening Day starter by manager Bud Black.
Garland, who in January signed a one-year deal worth $4.7 million which includes a $600,000 buyout for 2011, will face Dan Haren and the Arizona Diamondbacks in Phoenix on April 5.
Last season, Garland went a combined 11-13 with a 4.01 ERA for the Diamondbacks and the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Black also announced that Chris Young would be the Padres' starter in the season's second game, and Kevin Correia would pitch the series finale against Arizona.
"It's a big honor, especially being my first year with the team," Garland said. "[Chris Young] was an All-Star, Kevin [Correia] had a great year last year for them -- they are definitely deserving."
In other news, the Padres are being cautious with left-hander reliever Joe Thatcher's shoulder. Thatcher, who last pitched on March 19, had a cortisone shot on Saturday and is expected to miss several days. Black said there is a possibility that Thatcher, who was 1-0 with a 2.80 ERA in 52 games in 2009, could miss the start of the season.
-- The Associated Press
LUDWICK TAKES TWO OFF LEG (6:28 p.m. ET)
Cardinals slugger Ryan Ludwick left a game against the Mets with what the team called a "left shin contusion," according to MLB.com.
He fouled two balls off his shin during his third-inning at-bat. He stayed at the plate, however, and hit a long home run to left field.
Ludwick did not take his spot in right field in the next half inning.
-- ESPN.com news services
NOLASCO 1-HITS ASTROS THROUGH 7 1/3 INNINGS (5:52 p.m. ET)

Right-hander Ricky Nolasco turned in another solid start Sunday, allowing one hit in 7 1/3 scoreless innings in Jupiter, Fla., as the Florida Marlins beat the Houston Astros 4-0.
Nolasco retired the first 16 batters he faced before Jason Castro lined a single to right with one out in the sixth inning.
Nolasco had one minor flaw: He issued his first walk of the spring, missing on a 3-2 pitch with one out in the eighth inning. After the walk, which came on his 95th pitch, Nolasco left to a standing ovation at Roger Dean Stadium.
Astros first baseman Lance Berkman, who had knee surgery two weeks ago, took swings in the batting cage in Kissimmee. No word yet on whether he'll start the season on the disabled list. "Hopefully in a day or two we'll be able to answer that question with a little more certainty," Astros manager Brad Mills said.
-- The Associated Press
BACKUP CATCHER CASTRO LEAVES WITH APPARENT INJURY (5:09 p.m. ET)
White Sox catcher Ramon Castro left the team's split-squad game in Surprise, Ariz., against the Texas Rangers on Sunday in the top of the second inning with an apparent leg injury.
Castro pulled up between first and second after looping a double down the left-field line and walked into second base. He jogged slowly to third on Jayson Nix's subsequent single before he was replaced by a pinch-runner.
Castro, the backup to starter A.J. Pierzynski, hit .184 in 31 games with the White Sox after he was acquired from the Mets last July for pitcher Lance Broadway. He has played parts of 11 seasons in the majors, six with Florida and four-plus with the Mets before the trade.
-- The Associated Press
CUBS' LEE SITS WITH FOOT INJURY (4:35 p.m. ET)
Cubs slugger Derrek Lee has been scratched from Chicago's lineup because of lingering pain in his foot.
Cubs manager Lou Piniella said before Sunday's game against the Seattle Mariners that his first baseman and primary run producer fouled a pitch off his foot in a game about a week ago and then again during subsequent batting practice. Piniella said Lee's foot is still bothering him, so he gave him the day off.
Lee had treatment Sunday morning at the team's facility in Mesa, Ariz., before the team sent him home.
Piniella said Lee may play Monday or Tuesday. He said he is not concerned, and that "Derrek will be ready to go" for the season.
-- The Associated Press
OLSEN BOOSTS BID FOR ROTATION SPOT (4:04 p.m. ET)
Left-hander Scott Olsen made his case to be the Washington Nationals' fifth starter, throwing 5 1/3 solid innings in a 9-3 victory over the Atlanta Braves on Sunday in Viera, Fla.
Olsen allowed seven hits and two runs -- one earned -- and struck out four while walking none. It was his best outing of the spring and far more effective than his last start, when he gave up six runs and 12 hits in 4 1/3 innings against Detroit.
He made only 11 starts for Washington in 2009, going 2-4 with a 6.03 ERA before surgery on his left shoulder in July. He's competing with Livan Hernandez and J.D. Martin for a roster spot.
-- The Associated Press
ROYALS' MECHE HAS BULLPEN SESSION (3:43 p.m. ET)
Kansas City Royals right-hander Gil Meche has had his first bullpen session since last pitching on March 22 because of a stiff shoulder and neck.
He threw 63 pitches Sunday in Surprise, Ariz. Meche said his shoulder felt fine after the four-inning session and he used all of his pitches.
If Meche has not setbacks this week, the Royals plan for him to pitch Saturday in the final exhibition game, against the Texas Rangers. That would put him on target to start April 9 against the Boston Red Sox.
-- The Associated Press
KENNEDY EARNS SPOT IN DIAMONDBACKS' ROTATION (1:46 p.m. ET)
Ian Kennedy got the good news Saturday: He's earned a spot in the Arizona Diamondbacks' rotation.
Manager A.J. Hinch told Kennedy he'd made the cut after Kennedy allowed two runs in six inning against the Cleveland Indians on Saturday.
"I'm obviously really happy," Kennedy told The Arizona Republic.
Hinch told The Republic that Kennedy would start either the third or fourth game of the season.
"When we brought him to camp," Hinch said, "we penciled him in. We wanted him to win the job, and he progressively throughout the spring showed us that he was ready."
-- ESPN.com news services
TWINS' MORNEAU TAKES OUT FRUSTRATION ON TRASH CAN (1:44 p.m. ET)
Justin Morneau doesn't take kindly to spring training slumps.
The Minnesota Twins beat the Philadelphia Phillies on Saturday, but Morneau was 0-for-4, dropping his spring training average to .200.
Morneau made contact with a trash can, however, damaging it with his bat.
"That's normal for spring training," manager Ron Gardenhire told the Minneapolis Star-Tribune. "There comes a time always in spring training where one or two guys get a little mad at themselves and snap and break something, so it's that time.
"We're good right now, a little extra work and we're going at it."
-- ESPN.com news services
BLUE JAYS RELEASE GATHRIGHT (1:42 p.m. ET)
The Toronto Blue Jays released outfielder Joey Gathright and re-assigned two other players Sunday.
Gathright was held hitless in both Friday's and Saturday's games.
"Like I told him in the room, I said, 'Joey, when we brought you in, it wasn't to help us win a Pacific Coast League championship in [Triple-A] Las Vegas, it was to try to win a spot on this team,' " Blue Jays general manager Alex Anthopoulos told the Canadian Press on Sunday morning. "And with the way spring has gone, the way our depth chart is starting to look right now -- even in the minor leagues -- he'd probably be pretty far down in the outfield depth charts in terms of call-ups."
Infielder Brad Emaus (.410 average this spring) and outfielder Chris Lubanski (.189 in spring) were re-assigned.
-- ESPN.com news services
BRAVES SIT HEYWARD FOR SHIN SPLINTS (1:39 p.m. ET)
Outfielder Jason Heyward has been scratched from the Atlanta Braves' lineup against the Washington Nationals because of shin splints.
Heyward was slated to play right field in Sunday's exhibition game, but manager Bobby Cox held him out as a precaution, and the Braves said the rookie is day to day. Cox said Friday the 20-year-old would open the regular season as Atlanta's regular right fielder.
Shortstop Yunel Escobar and catcher David Ross did not make the trip to Viera. Escobar has tightness in his lower back and missed a third consecutive game. Ross injured his groin last week.
Right-hander Tommy Hanson originally was supposed to start Sunday, but because rain was forecast, the Braves had him throw six innings in a minor league intrasquad game instead.
-- The Associated Press
Oakland Athletics left-hander Dallas Braden possibly has a staph infection on his left shin but isn't expected to miss any time.
Braden woke up Friday morning with a lump on his leg and after being checked out by team trainers, was sent to see a doctor, just hours before he was scheduled to pitch against the Cubs. Although no firm diagnosis was made, Braden was given antibiotics as a precaution.
Braden, slated second in Oakland's starting rotation behind ace Ben Sheets, missed the final two months of last season because of nerve damage in his left foot. The condition left him with a tingling sensation in his entire foot -- and no feeling at all in about half of it. Earlier this week, a neurologist told him the numbness never would subside.
-- The Associated Press
STAUFFER WILLING TO HELP PADRES AS NEEDED (10:04 p.m. ET)
After pitching four shutout innings to help a Padres split-squad beat the Reds 3-2, Tim Stauffer thinks he can help San Diego, even if it's out of the bullpen.
Stauffer, a 2003 first-round pick who is out of options, is pushing hard for the final spot in the Padres' rotation but is open to a reliever role. The right-hander allowed two hits and struck out four in his first appearance since last Saturday.
"During the season relievers have to go that long or longer so I guess if that's something that's a possibility I need to get used to it," Stauffer said after a seven-day layoff. "That wouldn't be a hard transition to make."
Stauffer went 4-7 with a 3.58 ERA in 14 starts last season after missing all of 2008 with a shoulder injury. He lowered his spring ERA to 2.57.
-- The Associated Press
JOBA THE RELIEVER JOTS DOWN SAVE (7:57 p.m. ET)
Joba Chamberlain's first relief outing since he was sent back to the bullpen was a bit of an adventure -- he allowed two hits and struck out one during a scoreless ninth inning, earning the save in the New York Yankees' 2-1 victory over Detroit.
It was his first game since manager Joe Girardi announced on Thursday that Phil Hughes had won the competition for the team's fifth starter spot, beating out Chamberlain and three other candidates.
"A lot of guys came in and worked hard, and we didn't make anybody's decision easy," Chamberlain said. "That was our goal as guys coming in. I'm excited about being able to get the opportunity to help this team. We'll go from there."
Chamberlain is in the mix for the eighth-inning setup role before closer Mariano Rivera. The right-hander made 31 starts and one relief appearance during the regular season last year, but pitched out of the bullpen during the playoffs.
-- The Associated Press
HOMER A SPRING FIRST FOR FIELDER (7:52 p.m. ET)
Prince Fielder hit his first home run of the spring and Randy Wolf outdueled C.J. Wilson, leading the Milwaukee Brewers to a 3-1 victory over Texas.
Wolf allowed only Julio Borbon's two-out single in the third over six shutout innings. He walked one, struck out seven and faced only three batters over the minimum.
Wilson was nearly as untouchable, scattering two hits over his first five innings before tiring and giving up Fielder's two-run, two-out home run just over the left-field fence in the sixth.
-- The Associated Press
PUJOLS SCHEDULED FOR DAY OFF (7:38 p.m. ET)
Cardinals slugger Albert Pujols, who rested Friday, struck out twice in a 3-2 win over Florida. Manager Tony La Russa plans to use the NL MVP on Sunday and Monday before giving him a day off Tuesday.
Brad Penny, projected to be the Cardinals' No. 3 starter, allowed one run and five hits while lowering his spring ERA to 6.10.
Penny had a scary moment in the sixth, when Hanley Ramirez's hard groundout struck him on the inside of his left thigh. He was examined on the mound by trainers and left after retiring the next two batters.
"Hit me in the muscle, good spot again," Penny said. "If it had been a knee, it might have been a problem."
-- The Associated Press
MARLINS' JOHNSON TO THROW; HENSLEY STILL SHINING (7:30 p.m. ET)
Florida Marlins right-hander Josh Johnson, who was scratched from his scheduled start on Friday because of the flu, threw on flat ground Saturday morning.
Florida's ace is scheduled to throw off the mound Sunday. If that goes well, he should make his next start on Wednesday, which would allow him to start the season opener April 5 in New York against the Mets.
Johnson, 26, won 15 games in 33 starts last year and struck out 191 in 209 innings.
Meanwhile, Clay Hensley pitched six innings in a 3-2 loss to St. Louis, yielding three runs, one earned, and three hits. He dropped his spring ERA to 0.55 in 16/3 innings, making a strong case for a rotation spot.
"I thought he did outstanding," manager Fredi Gonzalez said. "He's getting closer to being on the team."
-- The Associated Press
TWINS TO SEND JONES TO MINORS (5:51 p.m. ET)
Jacque Jones has been told that he will not make the Minnesota Twins' Opening Day roster.
Jones hit .344 this spring with two home runs and three doubles. But manager Ron Gardenhire told him Saturday that there wasn't enough room for the veteran outfielder on a loaded Twins roster.
Jones will finish out spring training with the team and travel to Minnesota to play in an exhibition game against the Cardinals. After that, he will report to Triple-A Rochester.
After playing in the independent Atlantic League in 2009, Jones signed a minor league deal with the Twins in February. He spent the first seven seasons of his career with the Twins before leaving in 2006 for the Cubs. He also played for Detroit and Florida in
-- The Associated Press
RANGERS ACQUIRE BLANCO FROM CUBS (5:35 p.m. ET)
The Texas Rangers have acquired second baseman Andres Blanco from the Chicago Cubs for a player to be named or cash.
Blanco was unlikely to make Chicago's 25-man roster and he was out of options. In 2009, his 10th professional season and first with the Cubs, Blanco batted .252 with one homer and 12 RBIs in 123 at-bats. He sprained his knee early in spring training and was limited to nine at-bats.
Rangers manager Ron Washington says he still needs a utility infielder to spell Ian Kinsler and Elvis Andrus.
In 131 career major league games, including 78 during three short stints with the Royals, Blanco batted .252 with one homer and 31 RBIs.
-- The Associated Press
CHAPMAN AMONG 3 VYING FOR REDS' LAST SPOT (5:09 p.m. ET)
The only opening in the Cincinnati Reds' rotation has produced the biggest surprise of camp.
There was a glut of veterans trying to win the fifth starting spot when camp opened. With a week left, it's down to three youngsters who have never thrown a pitch in the majors.
Right-hander Mike Leake and left-handers Travis Wood and Aroldis Chapman are the last three standing. The 23-year-old Wood has the most experience -- five years in the minors. Leake was the Reds' top pick last June. Chapman is a 22-year-old Cuban defector whose sore back has hurt his chances.
The final decision likely will come down to one more head-to-head audition next week and front-office rumination about which one fits best at the moment.
Aaron Harang, Bronson Arroyo, Johnny Cueto and Homer Bailey have the other spots.
-- The Associated Press
The Padres have pushed back right-hander Mat Latos' scheduled Saturday start because of a sore elbow.
Manager Bud Black says Latos, one of several pitchers battling for two spots in the rotation, will instead throw in the bullpen and that he's already improving.
Latos is 2-0 with a 1.93 ERA in four appearances this spring. In 14 innings, Latos has allowed nine hits and walked three while striking out 11 batters.
Last season, Latos was 4-5 with a 4.62 ERA in 10 starts until the Padres shut him down in early September to reduce the wear and tear on his arm. Latos had pitched a combined 123 innings between the major and minor leagues after throwing 56 combined innings in 2008.
The Padres have said Latos won't throw more than 150 innings this year.
-- The Associated Press
ROBERTS RETURNS FOR ORIOLES (9:59 p.m. ET)
Second baseman Brian Roberts tested his ailing back in a game Friday night for the first time this spring. Although he showed no sign of injury, his swing still apparently needs some work.
Roberts went 0-for-3 with three strikeouts in Baltimore's 4-3 loss to the Twins. Roberts spent the previous six weeks at camp receiving treatment and doing exercises to ease the pain of a herniated disc in his lower back.
"My body, it felt pretty good," he said after his six-inning stint.
And his swing?
"Obviously not stellar," Roberts said. "My last at-bat, actually I started to finally feel a lot more comfortable in the box. My first two, I was pretty clueless."
-- The Associated Press
MOYER BOLSTERS BID FOR STARTING SPOT (9:56 p.m. ET)
Jamie Moyer bolstered his bid to win Philadelphia's fifth starter spot by giving up one hit over 6 2/3 innings in the Phillies' 3-0 victory over the Yankees.
The 47-year-old left-hander is competing with Kyle Kendrick, who has a 1.37 ERA in 19 2/3 innings over five games. Moyer struck out six and hit one batter with a pitch.
"Pretty good," Philadelphia manager Charlie Manuel said. "Threw good quality strikes down. Even when he missed, he was close. Got a little yo-yo on it every now and then. Back door. Up and down."
Moyer underwent two major offseason surgeries. He had a sports hernia operation in October and underwent another procedure on his left knee in January.
"I really didn't know what to expect because I haven't been through his kind of thing in the past," Moyer said. "So, go wing it and see what happens. Being in this clubhouse with this group of guys, it's a winning environment, it's a winning situation. It's really hard to walk away from."
-- The Associated Press
GRIFFEY HITS GRAND SLAM OFF FORMER TEAM (8:38 p.m. ET)
Junior's still got it. Ken Griffey Jr. hit a grand slam off Kip Wells in the bottom of the ninth inning to give his Mariners a 6-5 victory over his former team, the Reds.
Asked the last time he had hit a game-ending slam in any game -- spring training, during any of his 24 professional seasons, at Cincinnati Moeller High School -- Griffey said, "Never."
Griffey, who has hit 630 home runs in his career, had swung wildly and missed with the count 3-0, looking anxious. On 3-1, he again looked antsy chasing a low pitch.
Then he drove a belt-high fastball from Wells into right-center field. Griffey was grinning as he approached the plate. All the Mariners were waiting with high-fives and back slaps but spared him the joyous pummeling that he got a couple times last season for late-game hits.
"Just one of those things," Griffey said. "It's spring training. Everyone's working on something. I'm starting to be able to do some things [like wait on pitches]. And I happened to get a ball up into the wind tunnel."
-- The Associated Press
JACKSON HAS BEST OUTING OF SPRING TRAINING (8:36 p.m. ET)
After struggling in his last two starts, Diamondbacks right-hander Edwin Jackson had his best outing of spring training. Jackson threw six scoreless innings, allowing five hits with three walks and two strikeouts in Arizona's 10-1 victory over the White Sox.
"His delivery was significantly better," Diamondbacks manager A.J. Hinch said. "He wasn't jumpy or out of control like he had been his last couple of outings. He was very much in control of the game."
Jackson has worked on his mechanics after allowing seven runs in 2 1/3 innings against the Reds and four runs in 4 2/3 innings against the Giants.
He said he shook off few signs from catcher Chris Snyder.
"I was just finding a rhythm, going out there and keeping a nice tempo, making adjustments from pitch to pitch instead of waiting until the inning snowballed to make an adjustment," said Jackson, Arizona's No. 2 starter behind Dan Haren.
-- The Associated Press
MARMOL MELTS DOWN IN CUBS LOSS (8:33 p.m. ET)
It was a wonderful day of pitching for both the Cubs and Athletics -- until Carlos Marmol took the mound.
"You can't have a perfect day in spring training," Cubs manager Lou Piniella said after a ninth-inning meltdown by his closer helped an A's split squad to a 5-2 victory.
Oakland starter Dallas Braden was outstanding, Chicago's Carlos Zambrano was even better and several relievers excelled, too. Then Marmol, anointed the Cubs' bullpen ace after spending most of three seasons as the primary setup man, served up Travis Buck's tiebreaking homer on his third pitch.
He followed that by hitting Michael Taylor with a pitch and giving up Landon Powell's single. After Cliff Pennington's run-scoring grounder, Marmol yielded pinch-hitter Shane Peterson's RBI single.
In his previous game, Marmol blew a save by allowing a two-run homer. He has hit a batter in three straight outings.
"His mechanics are off," Piniella said. "He was really flat with his pitches and we were wondering why. I think we found something on the tape. He's coming almost sidearm ... and you lose that good snap. It's something to work on. That's why it's called spring training."
-- The Associated Press
LINCECUM LEAVES GAME EARLY (8:21 p.m. ET)
Tim Lincecum left early with a small cut on the middle finger of his pitching hand in the Giants' 5-3 win over the Angels.
The two-time defending NL Cy Young winner had hoped to pitch about six innings but lasted only four, leaving the game with the Giants trailing 1-0. Lincecum threw 84 pitches, giving up a run on six hits while walking two and striking out seven.
The right-hander didn't mention the cut to reporters afterward, but manager Bruce Bochy said it was a combination of the dry Arizona air with Lincecum's grip. Bochy said the same situation also surfaced last spring.
Bochy doesn't expect Lincecum to miss his final start of the spring on March 31, and his ace remains on target to start the season opener at Houston on April 5.
-- The Associated Press
EDMONDS HITS SECOND HOMER OF SPRING (7:53 p.m. ET)
Jim Edmonds hit a two-run homer and an RBI double in the Brewers' 9-4 loss to the Padres. Edmonds' drive off Jon Garland in the second inning was his second homer of the spring. The Gold Glove center fielder made the team Thursday when the Brewers purchased his minor league contract.
Garland pitched five innings, yielding two runs and three hits. He missed his last scheduled start with a balky right shoulder.
Yovani Gallardo, Milwaukee's leading candidate to start on Opening Day, had a far less successful outing, allowing six runs and eight hits in three innings.
Gallardo had allowed four runs in 14 innings over his previous four spring appearances.
-- The Associated Press
WESTBROOK WALKS FIVE IN WIN (7:12 p.m. ET)
Opening Day starter Jake Westbrook walked five over four-plus innings during the Indians' 5-4 victory over the Rockies.
Westbrook was charged with two runs and seven hits. He left with a 3-1 lead and the bases loaded. Saul Rivera got out of the jam, allowing one run.
Westbrook is eagerly awaiting his Opening Day assignment -- which will be his first game for Cleveland since May 28, 2008. The right-hander spent all of 2009 recovering from Tommy John surgery.
-- The Associated Press
WRIGHT CONTINUES SOLID SPRING TRAINING (5:56 p.m. ET)
David Wright homered and drove in three runs, continuing his solid spring training for the Mets. Wright hit a solo drive in the third inning for his fourth homer as the Mets and Marlins played to an 8-8 tie, calling it off after neither team scored in the 10th.
Nelson Figueroa had his worst outing of the spring for New York, allowing seven runs and eight hits in 2 2/3 innings.
Wright's shot made it 5-0 but Florida scored eight runs in the bottom half of the third.
-- The Associated Press
LESTER, RED SOX BULLPEN STRONG (5:03 p.m. ET)
Jon Lester pitched six strong innings in his fifth spring start, helping the Red Sox beat a Blue Jays split-squad 3-2.
Lester allowed two unearned runs and six hits, struck out five and walked two. Jonathan Papelbon, Hideki Okajima and Ramon Ramirez finished up with a scoreless inning apiece.
-- The Associated Press
MARCUM HIT HARD; OVERBAY LEAVES (4:57 p.m. ET)
Shaun Marcum, Toronto's scheduled Opening Day starter, was hit hard in the Blue Jays' 14-10 loss to the Rays. Marcum allowed nine runs and nine hits over five innings, raising his spring ERA to 8.10.
Blue Jays first baseman Lyle Overbay departed with a left knee contusion in the top of the first inning after he made contact with Carl Crawford. He is day to day.
-- The Associated Press
LOWE OUTDUELS VERLANDER IN BATTLE OF OPENING DAY STARTERS (4:34 p.m. ET)

Derek Lowe pitched six effective innings to help the Braves beat the Tigers 5-3. Lowe allowed two runs, one earned, and eight hits. Atlanta's scheduled Opening Day starter struck out four and walked none.
Brian McCann raised his average to .500 by going 2-for-3 for the Braves. Nate McLouth had two hits and two RBIs and is 4-for-9 in his past three games after a 1-for-35 start.
Justin Verlander, scheduled to start on Opening Day for Detroit, gave up three runs and six hits in 5 2/3 innings.
Brandon Inge and Gerald Laird each had two hits for the Tigers.
-- The Associated Press
INDIANS' ROTATION BECOMING NIGHTMARE (2:46 p.m. ET)
Russell Branyan's dream has turned into an Indians nightmare.
Signed to a $2 million free-agent deal in February and immediately made the starting first baseman by new manager Manny Acta, the 34-year-old Branyan has yet to play this spring with less than two weeks until the season opens.
"It's frustrating," said Branyan, sidelined by a herniated disk in his back. "This was my dream come true, to come back to the Indians and play every day. I've never really had that -- maybe for half of last year. I was pretty excited. This wasn't in the plans."
Acta's lineup plans are on hold as he awaits word on Branyan's progress. Until then, two of the Indians' prized prospects, Matt LaPorta and Michael Brantley, also are in limbo. Both were acquired in the blockbuster trade that sent 2007 AL Cy Young Award winner CC Sabathia to Milwaukee in July 2008.
If Branyan is healthy enough to play first base, LaPorta will go to left field and Brantley most likely back to Triple-A Columbus. Right now, LaPorta, coming off left hip and big toe surgery in October, is playing first base.
-- The Associated Press
CALERO AIMING FOR PROBLEM-FREE SEASON (11:42 a.m. ET)
Kiko Calero is coming off what he calls the best year of his career. Now the Mets' right-handed reliever wants to improve on it by getting through a whole season without shoulder problems.
New York signed Calero to a minor league deal at the beginning of March despite concerns about a right shoulder that has given the 35-year-old trouble since he had shoulder surgery in 2007.
He was 2-2 with a 1.95 ERA for the Marlins last season, striking out 10.35 hitters per nine innings with the help of a biting, 80 mph slider, but he missed 18 games before the All-Star break with shoulder inflammation.
A candidate for the eighth-inning setup role, Calero said on Friday that he is healthy and expects to be ready for the season.
-- The Associated Press
Todd Wellemeyer made another strong start in his bid for the fifth spot in San Francisco's rotation and Aaron Rowand had two hits and drove in a run and the Giants turned away Bay Area rival Oakland 6-3 on Thursday night.
Wellemeyer, a 31-year-old right-hander who is in camp as a non-roster invitee, pitched five innings for the second straight game. He gave up two runs (one earned) and three hits while walking two and striking out four and improved to 3-0.
Rowand, the Giants' leadoff hitter, singled and scored in a two-run third inning and hit an opposite-field double to right to bring home a run in a two-run fourth after Oakland had cut the lead to 2-1. Rowand has a hit in 11 of his 13 games this spring.
John Bowker, making a bid for a reserve outfield spot, had a pair of doubles after homering twice and driving in seven runs in a 7-0 win over Kansas City on Wednesday.
Giants closer Brian Wilson recorded his second save.
-- Associated Press
ROTATION SPOTS STILL UP FOR GRABS (10:14 p.m. ET)

Trying to earn rotation spots, Detroit's Jeremy Bonderman worked out of trouble over 4 1/3 innings, while Washington's J.D. Martin began poorly but finished well, and Johnny Damon's two hits helped a Tigers split squad beat the Nationals 8-2 Thursday night.
Still working his way back from shoulder surgery in 2008, Bonderman allowed five hits and two runs -- one earned. He also threw a wild pitch and walked a batter while recording only one 1-2-3 inning. He's competing with Dontrelle Willis and Nate Robertson for two openings.
Martin gave up five runs in the first, then retired the last 11 Tigers he faced over five innings.
Nationals center fielder Nyjer Morgan singled twice and stole two bases in his first game after being sidelined 10 days with a tight right hamstring.
-- Associated Press
PADRES' LEBLANC IMPROVES TO 3-0 (6:33 p.m. ET)
Wade LeBlanc limited the Chicago White Sox to two runs over six innings and the San Diego Padres won for the 10th time in 12 games with a 5-3 victory on Thursday.
LeBlanc, battling for a spot in the Padres' starting rotation, improved to 3-0 and lowered his spring ERA to 1.80 after allowing one earned run with five strikeouts.
Third baseman Chase Headley had two hits and two RBIs for the Padres.
White Sox starting pitcher Mark Buehrle allowed two unearned runs over five innings.
-- Associated Press
KENDRICK KEEPS FIGHTING FOR SPOT (6:12 p.m. ET)
Kyle Kendrick kept his name in the minds of the coaching staff and management as he continues to compete for the fifth starter's job. The 25-year-old right-hander allowed two runs -- one earned -- in 5 2/3 innings in the Phillies' 8-7 win over the Houston Astros.
"Obviously, you want to hear something, but it'll come down to the wire," Kendrick said. "They don't have to make a decision now. Like I've said before and like I've said all spring, it's out of my hands."
Kendrick is competing with 47-year-old Jamie Moyer for the final spot in the rotation. Moyer is scheduled to start Friday night when the Phillies travel to Tampa to take on the New York Yankees.
-- Associated Press
BERGESEN GETTING FORM BACK (6:06 p.m. ET)
Brad Bergesen got the confidence boost he needed -- at the expense of the defending world champion New York Yankees.
Bergesen took a shutout into the sixth inning, and the Baltimore Orioles got a home run from Adam Jones in an 8-0 victory Thursday.
Bergesen allowed three hits, walked two and struck out two in 5 2/3 innings. Both his strikeouts came against Alex Rodriguez.
"Today was the best I felt," Bergesen said. "Going up against the Yankees and being able to go 5 2/3 helped out, built some confidence."
Bergesen missed the final two months of his rookie season last year after being struck in the shin by a line drive. During the offseason he injured his shoulder during a commercial shoot and was forced to sit out the first 10 days of spring training camp.
-- Associated Press
ANGELS SCRATCH LHP KAZMIR (5:37 p.m. ET)
Los Angeles Angels lefty Scott Kazmir was scratched from his scheduled start Thursday against the Texas Rangers because of tightness in the deltoid muscle near his pitching shoulder.
Manager Mike Scioscia told reporters in Tempe, Ariz., that the injury, caused by fatigue in the deltoid muscle near his shoulder, should not affect Kazmir's ability to start the season on time. He is slated to open April 8 against the Oakland Athletics.
-- ESPN.com news services
WILLIS DISPLAYS COMMAND OF PITCHES (4:33 p.m. ET)
Dontrelle Willis overcame a shaky start and allowed just one run in four innings Thursday to lead the Detroit Tigers past the Toronto Blue Jays, 5-1.
Willis, who is competing for one of the final two spots in the Tigers' rotation with Nate Robertson and Jeremy Bonderman, walked three, but allowed only one hit. His spring training ERA rose to 1.20.
Willis walked the first two Blue Jays of the game and worked out of a jam with runners on second and third to retire the side.
Tigers manager Jim Leyland wouldn't speculate on his opening day rotation, but said that he was pleased with Willis' command of his pitches, not his control.
-- The Associated Press
MATSUZAKA GOES TWO INNINGS FOR RED SOX (3:54 p.m. ET)
Daisuke Matsuzaka made his first appearance of spring training, coming on in relief of starter Tim Wakefield, and the Boston Red Sox beat the Florida Marlins 6-4 on Thursday.
Matsuzaka, whose spring has been delayed by back and neck ailments, pitched two innings, giving up a run on two hits after Wakefield allowed three runs on six hits with two walks in six innings.
In his fifth start of the spring, Chris Volstad went 4 1/3 innings for Florida, giving up four runs -- one earned -- on eight hits with three strikeouts and no walks.
Dan Uggla hit a two-run homer for the Marlins, his second home run of spring training.
-- The Associated Press
KINSLER HOPES TO PLAY MONDAY (10:36 a.m. ET)
Rangers second baseman Ian Kinsler, who is recovering from a right high ankle sprain, hit off a tee on Monday. He has yet to put any pressure on his ankle while running, but is still targeting a Monday return to game action.
"I'm trying to keep a bat in my hands as much as possible," Kinsler said. "It's just a matter of getting the timing down. The key is seeing as many off-speed pitches as I can. So that's what I'm hoping to do."
-- Richard Durrett, ESPNDallas.com
YANKEES RELEASE RIGHT-HANDER GAUDIN (10:32 a.m. ET)
The New York Yankees have released pitcher Chad Gaudin, who was one of five candidates for the fifth starter spot.
New York general manager Brian Cashman made the announcement on Thursday.
Gaudin went 2-0 with a 3.43 ERA in 11 games, including six starts, with the Yankees last season.
Also, Alex Rodriguez declined comment for the second straight day on his pending meeting with federal investigators regarding his possible connection to a Canadian physician.
The Yankees third baseman is scheduled to meet with officials Friday in Buffalo, N.Y.
-- The Associated Press
Joe Beimel rejoined the Rockies and set his sights on Opening Day. The club just wants the left-hander to concentrate on getting ready.
Beimel passed his physical Tuesday and signed a minor league contract, adding to Colorado's depth in the bullpen. Whether he can be ready in time for Opening Day is still in question.
"Maybe that turns out to be," general manager Dan O'Dowd said before the Rockies lost 9-6 to the Padres, "but that's not what we're going into this for. We're trying to win a World Series. We're not just trying to get a major league pitcher. We want him to be right to help us -- put him in the best position to help our club and help ourself."
The Rockies are off Wednesday and manager Jim Tracy expects to meet with Beimel on Thursday. Tracy isn't planning on Beimel breaking camp with the Rockies but didn't rule it out.
"I won't sit here and 100 percent tell you that won't happen," Tracy said, "but I don't how feasible that is."
Beimel, who turns 33 on April 19, said he has been throwing daily since December and throwing off a mound every other day, up to 50 to 55 pitches.
-- The Associated Press
RAMIREZ RETURNS TO CUBS (8:57 p.m. ET)
Aramis Ramirez, who had not played since March 13 because of a right triceps injury, returned as the Cubs designated hitter and went 2-for-3 with an RBI in Chicago's 5-5 tie with the Royals. Ramirez is hoping to play third base by Friday.
"Soon as I can," he said. "I don't want to waste any more time. We're only a couple weeks away. As soon as I'm ready to try it the first time, I'm going to be playing third base."
Cubs manager Lou Piniella said Ramirez could have played third if this were a regular-season game.
"Probably," Ramirez said. "Right now, I don't want to take a chance, but I'll be ready. I don't need 30 more at-bats. I need five more and I'll be ready to go."
-- The Associated Press
EDMONDS' COMEBACK CONTINUES WITH FIVE RBIS (8:11 p.m. ET)
Jim Edmonds' comeback took another positive step as the 39-year-old drove in five runs to lead the Brewers to a 10-2 win over the Indians.
Edmonds hit a three-run homer off Jeremy Sowers in a four-run first inning and a two-run single off Jensen Lewis in a five-run second.
Edmonds, a 16-year veteran outfielder with 382 career homers and eight Gold Gloves, is on a minor league contract after sitting out last season.
"A guy who hasn't played for a year needs at-bats and I'm trying to get him some," Milwaukee manager Ken Macha said. "He went the other way off that lefty for the double. That was good to see because he's been pulling [the ball] too much."
Macha said Edmonds is still a good outfielder. The Brewers also have veteran outfielders Ryan Braun, Corey Hart and Jody Gerut along with Carlos Gomez, acquired in an offseason trade from Minnesota -- further limiting possible at-bats if Edmonds does make the team.
-- The Associated Press
ANDERSON SHARP AGAINST MINOR LEAGUERS (7:29 p.m. ET)
Left-hander Brett Anderson pitched five simulated innings against minor leaguers Tuesday after a stiff neck forced him to miss his scheduled start a day earlier.
Anderson threw 80 pitches during the hour-long workout, mixing his fastball and curve with an increasingly efficient changeup that impressed A's pitching coach Curt Young.
"From the view I had you can't throw the baseball much better for executing," said Young, who watched Anderson while standing near second base. "It was a great day for him. The one thing he needs to work on, and he knows he needs to work on, is his changeup factor."
Anderson was supposed to start Monday's game against Seattle but was pushed back because of a stiff neck that first began bothering the 22-year-old over the weekend.
Oakland had a day off Tuesday, so Anderson got his work in at the team's minor league camp less than a mile away from the A's spring training facilities. He had seven strikeouts and walked one and allowed three hits.
"I felt good, really good today," Anderson said. "I was trying to feature my changeup a little bit. My last couple of outings I want to incorporate more of my breaking balls like I would throw in a game, so my next outing will be key in that aspect."
-- The Associated Press
CAIN HELPS GIANTS IMPROVE TO 16-6 (7:27 p.m. ET)
Matt Cain pitched into the seventh inning in an impressive start, leading the Giants to a 6-1 victory over the White Sox.
Cain yielded three hits and an unearned run in 6 2/3 innings, helping San Francisco improve to a majors-best 16-6 this spring.
Pablo Sandoval and Bengie Molina each had two doubles and drove in a run for the Giants, who finished with seven doubles.
-- The Associated Press
ROYALS HOPEFUL MECHE'S SHOULDER IS OK (6:31 p.m. ET)
The Royals are hoping Gil Meche's stiff right shoulder won't cause him to miss any starts. Meche was scheduled to throw 75 pitches and go five innings Monday but left early. He came out after 56 pitches and three innings because of stiffness in his shoulder and neck.
Manager Trey Hillman says it's doubtful that Meche will have his normal bullpen session Wednesday. While the Royals' rotation is thin, Hillman says there are no plans to look outside the organization for another starter.
Meche is in the fourth year of a five-year, $55 million contract. He was limited to 23 starts and 129 innings last season because of shoulder and back problems. He started only four games after the All-Star break with an 8.14 ERA.
Meche is slated to be the Royals' No. 2 starter behind 2009 American League Cy Young Award winner Zack Greinke, but that is in jeopardy to begin the season.
If Meche were healthy, Brian Bannister, Luke Hochevar and Kyle Davies would probably fill out the final three rotation slots, but they were a combined 22-34 last season.
Kyle Farnsworth, who has not started since 2000 with the Cubs, and Robinson Tejeda, who made six starts in September after spending most of the year in the bullpen, are rotation candidates.
-- The Associated Press
METS RENAME SPRING TRAINING HOME (5:50 p.m. ET)
The Mets are losing their tradition. Tradition Field, the team's spring training home, was renamed Digital Domain Park.
The ballpark was known as Thomas J. White Stadium when it opened in 1988, named after a local politician, and was renamed Tradition Field in February 2004 under a 10-year agreement with Core Communities. That company operates Tradition, a 16,000-home community in the area.
The new naming-rights deal is with Digital Domain Holdings Corp., the parent of the Digital Domain visual effects studio in Venice, Calif. It includes provisions for programming at New York's Citi Field and its scoreboard on some dates.
Digital Domain is planning to open a studio in Port St. Lucie.
-- The Associated Press
HOWARD, VICTORINO CONNECT IN WIN (5:46 p.m. ET)
Ryan Howard is ready to break camp. The big first baseman hit a pair of solo drives off Matt Garza to help the Phillies beat the Rays 4-3.
"I'm pretty anxious to get up north and get things started," Howard said.
Howard and Shane Victorino connected in the fourth inning to give the Phillies a 2-0 lead. Howard went deep again in the sixth to put Philadelphia ahead 3-2. The All-Star slugger is batting .356 with three homers and eight RBIs in 16 games this spring.
"I put a couple of good swings on the ball today," Howard said. "That's what you work for all spring training, you just take things in stride and try to peak at the right time going into the season."
Jimmy Rollins and Greg Dobbs each had two hits for the Phillies, and Brian Schneider had a game-ending sacrifice fly. Rollins is hitting .313 (15-for-48) in 16 games this spring.
Joe Blanton pitched 5 1/3 innings for the Phillies, yielding two runs and four hits. The right-hander hasn't thrown his slider in a game yet but expects to incorporate it during his last two exhibition starts.
-- The Associated Press
METS' PEREZ STRUGGLES WITH COMMAND (5:04 p.m. ET)
Oliver Perez was pulled after walking consecutive batters in the fifth inning, part of a shaky outing in the Mets' 7-6 victory over the Braves.
Perez allowed three runs and five hits in 4 1/3 innings. The erratic left-hander struggled with his command at times, walking four batters.
New York is counting on Perez to bounce back this season after struggling last year.
-- The Associated Press
PAULINO CLOSER TO LOCKING UP ROTATION SPOT? (4:31 p.m. ET)
Felipe Paulino made progress toward locking up the fifth spot in the Astros' starting rotation, pitching five strong innings in an 11-1 win over the Pirates. Paulino gave up one run and seven hits. He struck out six and walked just one.
"That's what I'm looking for," he said. "All spring training, my mechanics have been getting better. All the work I've done is coming together. The ball was coming real smooth out of my hand."
The 26-year-old Paulino and veteran Brian Moehler are vying for the last rotation spot. Astros management would seem to prefer that Paulino, who is younger and has a livelier arm, wins the battle, but his control issues this spring have made them think twice. He came into the game with a 6.00 ERA in three outings, with six walks in six innings.
Paulino has been working on staying closed as he delivers the ball, which helps boost his velocity. He's also been trying to maintain a consistent release point.
"Last year, I just used my slider and fastball in spring training," Paulino said. "This year, it's been different. I've tried to use all my pitches -- my two-seamer, my four-seamer, my curveball, my slider, my changeup. That's made me a better pitcher. All my pitches were working today."
"I'm just trying to do the best I can," he said. "It's not my decision. The Astros have waited for me the last two years, so I know I have to do something better this year."
-- The Associated Press
GARLAND THROWS IN 'PEN, WILL START FOR PADRES (3:35 p.m. ET)
Jon Garland has thrown 30 pitches in a bullpen session and is set to start for the San Diego Padres in an exhibition game Friday.
Garland hasn't pitched in a game since March 16 because of what manager Bud Black calls a cranky shoulder. The Padres gave him four days off before he resumed playing catch over the weekend.
"I threw all the pitches. My last five or six, I cut the fastball, let it loose," Garland said. "Everything feels good. That's just something we'll have to keep an eye on and make sure it doesn't get like that and it'll be good for another 200 innings."
Garland went a combined 11-13 in 33 starts for the Dodgers and Arizona last year. The right-hander is 117-102 lifetime.
Also, outfielder Scott Hairston said his sore left calf was improving and he hoped to be back in the Padres' lineup by Wednesday. He fouled a pitch off his calf on March 11 and has been limited to minor league duty since.
-- The Associated Press
PIRATES CLOSER DOTEL GETS BACK TO WORK (9:51 a.m. ET)
Pirates closer Octavio Dotel, who has missed much of spring training with a strained oblique muscle, threw an inning against a Phillies minor league squad on Monday. He's confident he'll get enough work in the next two weeks and be ready for the start of the season.
"I will be ready for Opening Day," Dotel said, according to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. "I don't think I'll have any problems with that. I don't think there will be any setbacks. I'm going to be fine."
Dotel threw 18 pitches, 14 for strikes, and recorded three strikeouts and a fly out (a fourth out was added to the inning so he could reach his pitch count). He's expected to throw again Wednesday against the Red Sox.
"Everything feels good," Dotel said, according to the report. "We've just got to get going with the next step."
-- ESPN.com news services
MANUEL BACKS MURPHY DESPITE HITTING WOES (9:33 a.m. ET)
Although Daniel Murphy has struggled at the plate this spring, he still has New York Mets manager Jerry Manuel's confidence.
Murphy is hitting just .133 in 30 at-bats with less than two weeks left before the start of the season. Still, Manuel remains optimistic the 24-year-old can be an effective first baseman for the team. And he still sees Murphy as the frontrunner in a competition that also includes Mike Jacobs, who is in camp on a minor-league contract.
Murphy, who was charged with 10 errors in 101 games at first base last season, focused on improving his defense during the offseason. He came to spring training early to work with former Mets star Keith Hernandez, an 11-time Gold Glove winner at first.
"[Murphy] has looked extremely well at first base -- very active, very aggressive," Manuel said. "For him now, it's just a matter of him getting back to using the whole field as a hitter and becoming the offensive player we think he should be or can become."
Offensively, Jacobs is off to a slow start as well, hitting just .174 in 23 at-bats.
Despite praising both players, Manuel said he isn't any closer to deciding who will start at first Opening Day.
"We're still a ways away," Manuel said. "Once we get down to maybe the last four or five ballgames, everybody, we feel, is very close to being major league ready, and then we'll probably put a little bit more into the evaluation process at that time."
-- ESPN.com news services
Right-hander Ian Kennedy is making a strong case to join the Arizona Diamondbacks' rotation.
Kennedy struck out eight in five scoreless innings and the Arizona Diamondbacks earned a 5-4 win in 10 innings over the San Diego Padres on Monday.
Kennedy lowered his ERA to 2.70. He allowed two hits -- a two-out double by Will Venable in the first inning, and a single by Chris Denorfia in the third inning. Kennedy then picked off Denorfia at first.
"I really don't go out for strikeouts from the get-go," said Kennedy, who could follow Dan Haren and Edwin Jackson in the rotation. "If they come, that's awesome. [Catcher Chris Snyder called a great game. We worked really well together."
Arizona manager A.J. Hinch said Kennedy threw one of the best outings of the spring by a Diamondbacks starter.
"Excellent. Ian was really, really good. He had good rhythm. He had good command," Hinch said. "He had swing-and-miss pitches."
Hinch said the Diamondbacks will likely begin the season with four starting pitchers, as Brandon Webb is expected to miss the start of the season. He has yet to pitch in a Cactus League game.
Arizona is allowing Webb to build his arm strength through long toss. No date is set for his next bullpen.
-- The Associated Press
DUCHSCHERER DECLARES HIMSELF READY FOR SEASON (8:58 p.m. ET)
Justin Duchscherer put up a string of zeros while facing another team for the first time in 19 months. He then declared himself ready for the start of the season -- and past all of his troubles in 2009.
Duchscherer allowed four hits over four innings to help the Oakland Athletics beat the Seattle Mariners 7-2 on Monday.
"I was nervous, very anxious anticipating getting out there for the first time against big league guys," he said. "It's been a while."
Duchscherer missed all of last season because of elbow surgery and depression. The 32-year-old right-hander last pitched in a big league game Aug. 18, 2008.
Even though he only threw about 50 pitches -- he went to the bullpen for 10 pitches after he was finished -- Duchscherer said he expects to be in Oakland's rotation at the beginning of the season.
"As long as I'm ready to go five or six innings, I think that's kind of the plan," he said. "As the season goes, my second, third, fourth start I can progress back up to the 100, 100-pitch count range and hopefully get in seven, eight, nine innings like I feel like I'm supposed to."
Manager Bob Geren said Duchscherer should be ready to start the season in the rotation if he progresses with each spring outing.
Duchscherer was an All-Star in 2005 and '08 before the problems with his back, elbow and depression. He's still on an amended training schedule designed to preserve his back.
-- The Associated Press
MECHE LEAVES GAME WITH SORE SHOULDER (8:41 p.m. ET)
Gil Meche pitched three innings Monday before leaving the Kansas City Royals' 9-5 victory over the Chicago White Sox with a sore right shoulder.
Meche allowed three runs and four hits, struck out one and walked one. He threw 31 of his 56 pitches for strikes.
"The reason I came out was because I felt some stiffness in my shoulder," Meche said. "I didn't want to push it with the season coming up. It's nothing serious. I did all the tests. They checked me out. The shoulder is strong, but the tightness is there."
"There's no pain going on, so I'm not worried about it. After the third, I told Mac [pitching coach Bob McClure], 'Look, I don't feel like I'm getting anywhere. I'm just going through the motions, let's just shut it down and save it for later."
Meche was limited to 23 starts and 129 innings because of shoulder and back problems in 2009.
"Last year I did push through things and I know where that got me," Meche said. "I want to make sure I feel 100 percent when the season starts. It's a matter of me being smart right now. If I have it now, it's OK, but I'm just going to make sure I do the right things, so it goes away."
"When you get stiff on the mound, the next thing you know your neck is bothering you because you're not throwing normal. I felt a little stiffness in my neck coming on, too," he said. "I was like it's not going to be worth it. I'm only going to make myself worse by staying out here trying to pitch."
Meche was scheduled to throw five innings or about 70-75 pitches with only two more starts left in spring training.
"If I go out there throwing two more innings and not being free and easy, who knows what could happen?" he said. "I know I need to get a pitch count up, but if you don't throw correctly that's when injuries happen. The trainers agreed it was a good idea to come out."
-- The Associated Press
CRISP SLATED TO PLAY OUTFIELD THIS WEEK (8:03 p.m. ET)
Oakland center fielder Coco Crisp homered as a designated hitter in his return to the Athletics' lineup against Seattle after being sidelined for nearly two weeks with a sore hamstring.
Crisp is scheduled to play the outfield for the first time this spring Wednesday.
He signed a $5.25 million, one-year contract with the A's in December, six months after undergoing operations on both shoulders. A tender hamstring sidelined the 30-year-old crisp for 12 days before his return Monday.
Batting leadoff, Crisp struck out in his first at-bat then hit a three-run homer in the second inning off Seattle starter Ian Snell.
-- The Associated Press
MCLOUTH LOOKING TO OVERCOME STRUGGLES (7:41 p.m. ET)
Wearing a new set of contact lenses, Nate McLouth has been able to see the ball better than ever this spring.
That doesn't mean, however, that the Atlanta center fielder has been able to hit it.
Mired in a 0 for 28 slump with 12 strikeouts, McLouth batted in every inning of a rain-shorted minor league game Sunday in hopes of getting on track with the start of the season two weeks away.
McLouth got three hits -- two more than he's had in real spring games. Maybe the move worked. Finally, he had something positive to build on.
"I just needed to step away," said McLouth, batting .029. "Hitting is a funny thing. It can wear on you, even in spring training when numbers don't matter -- because they do.
"Not necessarily numbers, but feeling well and making good contact matters. And when that's not happening, regardless of whether it's spring training or not, that's frustrating."
Frustrating for McLouth and worrisome for the Braves. They are counting on him to be their leadoff hitter.
How bad has McLouth been this spring? His one hit in 35 at-bats came on March 6 and he has 14 strikeouts and three walks, striking out twice in five of his past eight games.
-- The Associated Press
TALLET GETTING FEEL FOR CHANGEUP (6:27 p.m. ET)
Brian Tallet has been working on his changeup this spring, and he's still trying to get a feel for it.
Tallet decided to keep the pitch out of the dirt while facing Brandon Inge in the first inning of the Toronto Blue Jays' 8-2 loss to the Detroit Tigers on Monday, and the third baseman connected for a three-run homer.
"I just told myself, 'I'm not going to bounce them anymore. It's not going to get any better by bouncing it,'" Tallet said. "I've got to be able to get that pitch in the zone. So we were working on getting it up a little bit and got that one up just too much."
Tallet, expected to be Toronto's fifth starter, allowed five runs and eight hits in five innings.
"You take that one [changeup] away and it's a whole different ballgame," he said.
"I don't think he would've thrown it in a [regular-season] game, especially 1-1, kind of a contact situation," catcher John Buck said. "Probably the cutter or that good sinker, his go-to pitches in that situation, two runners on. But I wanted him to throw that in a pressure situation."
-- The Associated Press
GARCIA MAKES CASE FOR ROTATION SPOT (6:21 p.m. ET)
Jaime Garcia is making a strong bid for a spot in the St. Louis Cardinals' rotation.
Garcia threw four crisp innings, David Freese and Joe Mather hit their first spring homers and a Cardinals split-squad beat the Houston Astros 6-4 on Monday.
Garcia, who missed last season after undergoing reconstructive left elbow surgery, allowed one run and two hits in relief of Kyle Lohse. He has yielded two runs while striking out 15 in 12 2/3 innings over four outings this spring.
"My arm feels awesome," he said. "It feels better than it has ever felt. I did everything I could in the offseason. Finally now I feel like everything is paying off. It's feeling good and everything is going the way it's supposed to go."
Garcia is competing with non-roster invitee Rich Hill and Kyle McClellan for the final spot in the rotation behind Chris Carpenter, Adam Wainwright, Lohse and Brad Penny.
Garcia was thought to be a long shot for the spot because of the surgery, but his success has put him in a close race with McClellan while Hill has struggled.
-- The Associated Press
RAYS HIT SEVEN HOMERS OFF RED SOX (4:51 p.m. ET)

James Shields was solid for 5 2/3 innings and Evan Longoria hit two of Tampa Bay's seven home runs Monday in an 11-9 win over a split squad of Boston Red Sox.
Shields recently was picked by Rays manager Joe Maddon to start on Opening Day for the third straight year. The right-hander gave up one run and five hits.
Kelly Shoppach homered twice for Tampa Bay and drove in four runs. Ben Zobrist, Sean Rodriguez and Hank Blalock also homered for the Rays.
Boof Bonser was hit hard in his first start for the Red Sox, giving up five runs and six hits in two-plus innings.
Mike Cameron had two hits for Boston and is batting .423 this spring.
-- The Associated Press
NATIONALS TEE OFF ON METS' PELFREY (4:23 p.m. ET)

Ryan Zimmerman and Josh Willingham each hit two homers off Mets starter Mike Pelfrey, leading the Washington Nationals to a 7-5 victory over New York on Monday.
Zimmerman hit a towering, wind-aided solo drive in the first inning, and a two-run shot in the fifth. Willingham had a solo shot in the second and a two-run homer in the fourth.
Pelfrey was charged with six runs, five earned, and seven hits in 4 2/3 innings.
Jason Marquis pitched 4 2/3 innings for the Nationals, yielding three runs and seven hits.
-- The Associated Press
HAFNER FEELING LIKE HIMSELF AGAIN (4:19 p.m. ET)
For the first time in two years, Travis Hafner, the Cleveland Indians' easygoing, hard-swinging designated hitter, is looking like himself again. Now almost 18 months removed from shoulder surgery, the man nicknamed "Pronk" -- part project, part donkey -- by teammates years ago, is driving the ball and turning on pitches the way he once did.
In the past week, Hafner has hit a pair of homers -- one a tape-measure shot to center field -- that has given the Indians hope he can anchor the middle of Cleveland's lineup the way he did in 2006, when he hit a career-high 42 homers with 117 RBIs.
"It's starting to get close to where it was," said Hafner, who has studied nuances of his swing on video. "You can notice a pretty big difference in my swing in '08 and '09. But this year, I've been able to do some things and hopefully get back to where I was."
Last season, he batted .272 with 16 homers and 49 RBIs in 94 games. He had opened the season feeling fine, but wound up on the disabled list in late April with shoulder soreness and didn't return until June. The statistics aside, what was more troubling was Hafner appeared lost at the plate.
Hafner isn't making excuses. "I didn't swing the bat the way I wanted to," he said. "I just didn't see the ball the same as I used to. I swung at bad pitches. Hitting is all about consistency."
-- The Associated Press
MARCUM GETS OPENING DAY START FOR BLUE JAYS (3:31 p.m. ET)
Right-hander Shaun Marcum will be Toronto's Opening Day starter.
It will be the first time in eight years that Roy Halladay won't take the mound to open the Blue Jays' season. Now that Halladay has been traded to Philadelphia, manager Cito Gaston said Monday it was an easy decision because of the way Marcum has pitched this spring. In two starts covering five shutout innings, he has allowed one hit and one walk while striking out four.
Gaston has not decided on the rest of the rotation for the opening series against Texas.
"I think he's earned it from what he's done in the past," Gaston said of Marcum, 12-9 in 2007, his first full season with the Blue Jays, and 9-7 in 2008 before a sore elbow ended his season.
Marcum missed half of the 2008 season and all of 2009 recovering from elbow surgery. He says "it never even crossed my mind that I'd be in this position."
-- The Associated Press
JOBA THROWS IN YANKEES INTRASQUAD GAME (2:12 p.m. ET)
Joba Chamberlain made a big start in an empty ballpark.
Bidding for the fifth spot in the New York Yankees' rotation, Chamberlain allowed two runs and six hits over five innings in an intrasquad game on Monday. The contest at Steinbrenner Field was not open to the public, which meant only a handful of people were in the 11,076-seat stadium.
"I felt like I was back in the Florida State League where it all started," said Chamberlain, who pitched for Single-A Tampa of the FSL in 2007. "That was kind of the mindset I took out of it and I think that was good for me. Why I got to where I'm at with the hard work and everything."
Chamberlain had one strikeout, one walk and induced three double plays.
Yankees manager Joe Girardi and other team officials will meet Wednesday to discuss the final rotation spot. The winner could be announced Thursday or Friday.
-- The Associated Press
NATIONALS SEND DUNCAN TO MINOR LEAGUE CAMP (9:22 a.m. ET)
The Nationals have reassigned outfielder Chris Duncan to minor league camp, the team announced Monday.
Duncan had been trying to make the Nationals as a non-roster invitee. He spent parts of five years with the St. Louis Cardinals, including the team's run to a World Series title in 2006. But injuries limited Duncan's effectiveness the past three seasons. He was traded to the Red Sox in July and released after he hit less than .200 in 92 minor-league at-bats.
The Nationals also reassigned infielder Pete Orr to minor league camp and optioned right-handed pitcher Shairon Martis to Triple-A Syracuse.
The moves trimmed the Nationals' big-league roster to 36 players.
-- ESPN.com news services
Texas catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia was scratched from the lineup because of a strained muscle in his upper left back.
He was injured warming up the pitcher. X-rays were negative.
Last season, Saltalamacchia had surgery on the right side for thoracic outlet syndrome, a condition where a rib bone pushes on a nerve and causes numbness in the arm and hand.
-- Associated Press
KEARNS MAKES CASE FOR STARTING SPOT (8:09 p.m. ET)
Austin Kearns hit his first two home runs of the spring and drove in five runs as the Cleveland Indians rolled to a 12-5 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sunday.
Kearns, who has a chance at the Indians' starting left field job, went deep against Dodgers starter Eric Stults and again against reliever Aaron Miller. In 25 at-bats before Sunday, he had just two extra-base hits and had not driven in a run.
"He's a right-handed bat with a track record and some power," Indians manager Manny Acta said. "He can play the three outfields. His best position is right field but he can play center and occasionally left and he's taking ground balls at first base."
Indians starter Jake Westbrook pitched well, giving up one run on six hits in 4 2/3 innings. He did not walk a batter and had three strikeouts. Westbrook has not pitched in a big-league game since May 2008 because of elbow problems.
-- Associated Press
THOME CONTINUES TO IMPRESS (8:02 p.m. ET)
Jim Thome has impressed the Minnesota Twins so far this spring.
Thome went 2 for 4 with a double and three RBIs, leading the Twins past the Tampa Bay Rays 12-3 on Sunday.
The Twins sent out their Opening Day lineup, with Thome spelling Jason Kubel as the designated hitter with Kubel playing in an intrasquad game, and tagged Rays starter Wade Davis for five runs in the first inning.
Davis, trying to earn a spot in Tampa Bay's starting rotation, gave up seven runs -- five earned -- in two innings. He walked one and struck out one.
"I had one goal, and that was to try to pitch all my innings," Davis said. "That didn't happen. I think I can do a lot better against them. I know I can do a lot better."
Scott Baker, already named the Twins' Opening Day starter, struck out three, walked one and gave up one hit in five innings.
Joe Mauer went 2 for 4 with a run scored, boosting his spring training batting average to .471 before the team announced his agreement on an $184 million, eight-year contract extension.
-- Associated Press
GREINKE THROWS MORE BALLS THAN STRIKES (6:49 p.m. ET)
AL Cy Young Award winner Zack Greinke gave up two runs in five innings of a minor league game Sunday.
Pitching for Triple-A Omaha, Kansas City's Greinke allowed six hits, including a home run, walked three and struck out two. He threw more balls, 39, than strikes, 38.
"I was trying to throw a strike every pitch, so that was really bad," Greinke said. "Even the strikes weren't where I wanted them. The last pitch of the game was probably the only one where I actually hit my spot the whole time. I don't why I was so bad. I haven't been that bad in a long time."
The Royals opted to have Greinke to get his work in against Triple-A Portland, a San Diego affiliate, on a back field rather than face the Colorado Rockies at Surprise Stadium, but he said pitching on a back field with few watching did not affect him.
"I just pitched bad," he said. "I didn't really feel like I wasn't up for it. It was just bad pitching. I couldn't throw the ball where I wanted, so I couldn't work on anything."
-- Associated Press
YANKS SCRAMBLE TO GET PITCHERS ON MOUND (4:16 p.m. ET)
Yankees manager Joe Girardi faced a pitching problem: too many pitchers and not enough innings.
Girardi and other team officials spent two hours after Sunday's game against the Detroit Tigers was canceled by rain organizing plans for eight different pitchers.
The Yankees set up an intrasquad game Monday, which will have fifth starter candidate Joba Chamberlain and Andy Pettitte face each other. Closer Mariano Rivera, Damaso Marte, Chan Ho Park and David Robertson will also pitch.
A.J. Burnett and Phil Hughes, who is also competing for the final rotation spot, will pitch in a road game against Philadelphia.
-- Associated Press
BRAVES' JURRJENS STILL ON TRACK (4:02 p.m. ET)
Jair Jurrjens hasn't had much luck with the weather this spring, but the Atlanta Braves right-hander is still on track to make his first regular-season start April 8 against the Chicago Cubs.
Jurrjens fell victim to the rain again Sunday, which washed out Atlanta's scheduled game against the St. Louis Cardinals. He'll get his work in during a minor league game Monday as he continues in catch-up mode after reporting to spring training with a sore shoulder.
A 14-game winner in 2009, Jurrjens was held out of the canceled game because of the weather, as was scheduled Cardinals starter Brad Penny. The teams ended up making it into the second inning despite the rain before play was stopped.
"I wanted to pitch today, but it's not a problem," Jurrjens said. "My shoulder feels good now, so I'm OK. I'll get my work in."
-- Associated Press
METS' FIGUEROA NOT PREPARING FOR BUFFALO (3:40 p.m. ET)
Nelson Figueroa appreciates the chance the New York Mets have given him to pitch in the majors, but he admits he is leaving every possibility open to pitch somewhere else -- just maybe not Buffalo.
"I feel like I've continued to have success," the right-hander said after earning the win by throwing three innings and striking out five in the Mets' 8-1 victory over the University of Michigan on Sunday at Tradition Field.
"Until I hear otherwise, I'm going to prepare as if I'm breaking camp [with the Mets]."
If not, he said, he will explore other options, including any that don't include another stint with the Mets' Triple-A affiliate in Buffalo.
He said that while he tries to keep the thought in the back of his mind, he can't help but think of camp coming to an end and what his reaction would be if he were designated for assignment to Buffalo.
"There's no way it's not on my mind," he said. "It's a situation that isn't ideal. I think I have a good rapport with the club and I like the staff [at Buffalo].
"Still, I don't looking forward to pitching in 30 degree weather for the first month and a half."
-- Associated Press
MCCUTCHEN CLOSING GAP ON RACE TO START (3:07 p.m. ET)
Pittsburgh right-hander Daniel McCutchen's start was pushed back a day after the Pirates' game against the Tampa Bay Rays was rained out on Sunday.
He'll pitch Monday in Clearwater against the Phillies' Triple-A club -- an assignment that indicates he's closed the gap on Kevin Hart in the race to be Pittsburgh's fifth starter.
Closer Octavio Dotel, out all spring due to a strained oblique, will make his first appearance Monday against another Phillies' minor-league team.
Rays right-hander Andy Sonnanstine also was pushed back. He will pitch Monday, either against the Boston Red Sox or in a minor league game.
-- Associated Press
HOLLIDAY SAYS HE'LL BE BACK MONDAY (1:10 p.m. ET)
Cardinals left fielder Matt Holliday says he expects to return to the team's starting lineup on Monday for a spring training game against the Boston Red Sox, the St. Louis Post Dispatch reported.
Holliday, who is recovering from a muscle strain on his right side, has only five official at-bats this spring, with two doubles and four walks. But he said the remaining two weeks of spring training are enough time for him to get ready for Opening Day, according to the report.
"I'll be able to get another 20 or 30 [at-bats] and I should be fine," he said, according to the report.
-- ESPN.com news services
MARLINS' JIMENEZ RETURNED TO RED SOX (11:55 a.m. ET)
Third baseman Jorge Jimenez, a Rule 5 draft pick, has been offered back to the Red Sox, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel reports.
Players chosen in the Rule 5 draft must be returned to their club of origin if they are not on the major league roster.
"You have to carry him on the big club. We felt that wasn't going to be the case," Marlins manager Fredi Gonzalez said Sunday before a spring training game against the Nationals, according to the report.
Jimenez was hoping to either beat out Jorge Cantu at third or win a roster spot as a left-handed pinch hitter.
-- ESPN.com news services
REPORT: A'S RELIEVER MELOAN HAS TORN LIGAMENT (11:45 a.m. ET)
Athletics right-handed reliever John Meloan says he has a torn elbow ligament and expects he will have season-ending surgery, the San Francisco Chronicle reports.
Meloan, who had an MRI exam on Friday, says he plans to go to Dr. James Andrews. He hopes to be ready for next spring, according to the report.
Reliever Joey Devine and closer Andrew Bailey, the reigning AL rookie of the year, have also experienced elbow problems during spring training.
-- ESPN.com news services