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Suarez had 10 straight quality starts through June 29, the longest stretch in MLB this year. As it turned out, Suarez’s first-inning troubles were not an aberration on this Sunday afternoon.
Suarez went deep again in the third with a solo shot to right center. St. Louis right-hander Sonny Gray (9-4) gave up a season-high nine runs, including eight earned, over 3 1/3 innings.
Interestingly, the Diamondbacks, and Suarez, have come out of the MLB All-Star break red-hot, with a sweep over the St. Louis Cardinals to move to 50-50 on the season and inch closer in the MLB ...
“No player in MLB history has been traded in-season after reaching 35 home runs. Diamondbacks All-Star third baseman Eugenio Suarez, who just hit his 35th homer, could very well be the 1st ...
Eugenio Suarez had seen the rumors and heard the noise about him as a potential candidate to be dealt before the Major League Baseball trade deadline at the end of July. He’s taken it in stride ...
He is now hitting .257/.328/.601 and leads the NL with 35 homers and 85 RBI. He's legitimately one of the best power hitters in the majors and this isn't some small-sample fluke, because we've ...
Suarez is among the few players the Diamondbacks could offer on the trade block before the MLB Trade Deadline approaches. He has a monster year at third base with 31 homers, 78 RBIs, and an .889 OPS.
— MLB (@MLB) July 1, 2025 The Tigers’ 2025 season speaks for itself, and the Tigers’ .600 winning percentage leads all clubs.
He now leads the National League with 33 homers, trailing only Aaron Judge and Cal Raleigh in MLB. It was also his fifth multi-homer game of the season.
The post Eugenio Suarez’s eye-opening admission on possible Tigers trade appeared first on ClutchPoints. The Arizona Diamondbacks could look like a different team by the end of the trade ...
PHOENIX (AP) Eugenio Suárez homered twice for the second consecutive day and Merrill Kelly allowed two runs in six innings to help the Arizona Diamondbacks beat the St. Louis Cardinals 5-3 on Sunday.
And the numbers back him up. Brewers’ third basemen rank 25th in MLB with a 71 wRC+ and are tied for 23rd in fWAR (0.2). That’s not just underwhelming—that’s playoff liability territory.