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			notebook: Mets, deGrom ink five-year extension 
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			 [March 27, 2019] 
			The New York Mets and reigning 
			Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom agreed to terms on a five-year, 
			$137.5 million extension Tuesday. 
 DeGrom, 30, had been under contract through next season and was 
			scheduled to earn $17 million in 2019. The agreement comes just 
			three days after the ace right-hander told reporters he wasn't 
			confident of a deal being struck before he takes the mound on 
			Opening Day against the Washington Nationals on Thursday.
 
 He will now earn $7 million in 2019 to go with a $10 million signing 
			bonus, $23 million in 2020, $33.5 million in 2021-22 and $30.5 
			million in 2023 with a club option in 2024, according to reports. 
			The deal includes an opt-out clause after the 2022 season as well as 
			a full no-trade clause.
 
 DeGrom is coming off a 2018 season in which he posted a 1.70 ERA 
			with 269 strikeouts in 32 starts and won the Cy Young despite going 
			just 10-9 for a Mets team that finished 77-85. It was the lowest win 
			total ever for a Cy Young winner, breaking the previous record of 13 
			set by the Seattle Mariners' Felix Hernandez in 2010.
 
			
			 
			
 --Fernando Tatis Jr., one of baseball's top prospects, will open the 
			2019 season in the major leagues with the San Diego Padres, 
			according to multiple reports.
 
 Tatis, 20, is considered neck-and-neck with Toronto Blue Jays phenom 
			Vladimir Guerrero Jr. for top prospect in all of baseball. He will 
			make his major league debut when he takes the field for the Padres, 
			having peaked with Double-A San Antonio last season.
 
 Tatis, a shortstop, hit .286 with 16 home runs, 43 RBIs and 16 
			stolen bases in 88 games with San Antonio last season. He was shut 
			down in July after needing left thumb surgery, returning to play 23 
			games in the Dominican Winter League during the offseason.
 
 --Right-hander Kyle Hendricks agreed to a four-year contract through 
			2023, plus a team option for a fifth season, with the Chicago Cubs.
 
 ESPN reported the deal, plus Hendricks' existing salary of $7.045 
			million for 2019, has a total value of $63 million before the option 
			year. The option includes a $1.5 million buyout and is worth $16 
			million. It will only vest if Hendricks finishes in the top three in 
			National League Cy Young voting in 2020, per ESPN.
 
 Hendricks was 14-11 last season with a 3.44 ERA in a career-high 199 
			innings and 33 starts.
 
 --San Francisco Giants president and CEO Larry Baer was suspended 
			without pay until July 2, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred announced.
 
 Baer has been on leave since video of a public altercation with his 
			wife surfaced. The footage captured by TMZ showed Baer aggressively 
			pulling something from the hand of his wife, Pam, at a public park 
			in San Francisco. Pam Baer was heard screaming before going to the 
			ground.
 
 Larry Baer was ordered to have "no involvement in the operations of 
			the Giants" and is required to undergo an evaluation by an expert to 
			determine "an appropriate treatment and counseling plan," Manfred 
			announced.
 
			--Boston Red Sox first baseman Steve Pearce, the reigning World 
			Series MVP, will begin the season on the injured list.
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			New York Mets starting pitcher Jacob deGrom (48) sits in the dugout 
			prior to the game against the Atlanta Braves at Champion Stadium. 
			Mandatory Credit: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports 
            
			 
			He is suffering from a left calf injury and hasn't played in spring 
			training since March 17. Sam Travis will replace Pearce on the 
			Opening Day roster.
 Pearce batted .284 with 11 homers and 42 RBIs in 215 at-bats with 
			the Red Sox and Toronto Blue Jays last season. The Red Sox acquired 
			him in a trade on June 28, after which he hit .279 with seven home 
			runs in 50 games.
 
 --Arizona Diamondbacks outfielder Steven Souza Jr. will miss the 
			2019 season after tearing multiple ligaments in his left knee while 
			stepping awkwardly on home plate Monday night.
 
 Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo confirmed the extent of the 
			injuries: torn ACL, torn LCL, a partially torn PCL and a posterior 
			lateral capsule tear. He will require major surgery and 
			rehabilitation.
 
 Souza, who turns 30 next month, was injured in the fourth inning of 
			Monday's exhibition game against the Chicago White Sox at Chase 
			Field in Phoenix. His foot appeared to slip on the plate on a 
			non-contact play and he fell to the ground in pain, clutching his 
			left knee. Souza played in 72 games in his first season with Arizona 
			in 2018, missing much of the season due to pectoral strains.
 
 --Cincinnati Reds prospect Nick Senzel is expected to be in a 
			walking boot for up to two weeks because of a sprained ankle that he 
			sustained during a spring training game, the team announced.
 
 Senzel, 23, is considered by many talent evaluators to be the No. 1 
			prospect in the Reds' farm system. He is expected to head to 
			Triple-A Louisville once he recovers from the injury.
 
 Cincinnati drafted Senzel with the No. 2 overall pick in the 2016 
			amateur draft. The former Tennessee Volunteers standout has hit .314 
			with 27 home runs and 130 RBIs in 231 games in the minors.
 
 --Former Colorado Rockies star Todd Helton has entered a residential 
			treatment program after receiving a misdemeanor citation earlier 
			this month on a charge of driving under the influence, his attorney 
			says.
 
 
			 
			Helton's car struck a telephone pole at around 6 p.m. on March 18, 
			according to a Knox County (Tenn.) sheriff's report obtained by the 
			Denver Post.
 
 According to police, Helton told the officers he had taken an Ambien 
			earlier that afternoon. One officer spotted a cup inside the vehicle 
			that "had the odor of an alcoholic beverage." Helton, 45, required 
			medical treatment and was taken to the hospital for further 
			evaluation.
 
 --Field Level Media
 
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