Rec Sports
Misiorowski’s promising debut hits speed bump. Plus: Youth movement in Anaheim
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It was the best of debuts for Jacob Misiorowski … until it ended early. Plus: The Angels call up (another) prospect, the Rangers offense is maybe not dead and Ken tells us why Ryan Yarbrough’s a Yankee. I’m Levi Weaver, here with Ken Rosenthal. Welcome to The Windup!
Intros: Jacob Misiorowski’s mostly stellar debut
The news broke Tuesday: Milwaukee was calling up 23-year-old flame thrower Jacob Misiorowski to start against the Cardinals.
In 63 1/3 innings at Triple-A Nashville, Misiorowski — No. 87 on Keith Law’s top 100 prospects list and No. 5 on his Brewers list — had an ERA of 2.13, with 80 strikeouts and 31 walks. Here’s how the debut went:
First inning: 1-2-3
Second inning: 1-2-3 with a strikeout
Third inning: 1-2-3, sorta: a walk, a double play and a strikeout
Fourth inning: two walks, but still no hits
Fifth inning: 1-2-3, with two strikeouts
Three pitches into the sixth inning: a minor disaster. After Misiorowski threw ball three to Victor Scott II, this happened (watch the right ankle).
MUST SEE: Jacob Misiorowski’s first three pitches to start his Major League career:
100 MPH 🔥
102 MPH 🔥
101 MPH 🔥 pic.twitter.com/gObMMacPDT— MLB (@MLB) June 12, 2025
Misiorowski left the game — right calf and quad cramping, of all things — and while reliever Nick Mears kept the no-hitter intact for the rest of the sixth inning, Cardinals first baseman Willson Contreras singled off Aaron Ashby to start the seventh inning.
(Not to get too sidetracked, but Contreras then attempted to steal and was thrown out by his brother William, who catches for the Brewers. I await Jayson Stark’s confirmation on how often this has happened in history.)
Anyway, what a debut for Misiorowski, huh?
Oh, by the way, the 37-33 Brewers won 6-0 to leapfrog the Cardinals for second place in the NL Central. All it took was for me to go and declare St. Louis this year’s Plot Twist, and now they’re mired in a five-game losing streak. Sorry ‘bout it, Cardinals fans.
More Brewers: Yesterday morning, the Brewers started their day on social media by wishing pitcher Aaron Civale happy birthday. Hours later, news broke that Civale — relegated to the bullpen for the first time in his career — had requested a trade.
Ken’s Notebook: Yarbrough thriving after leaving Blue Jays
From my latest column:
Right-hander Jacob Barnes and lefty Richard Lovelady are best described as journeymen. Most baseball fans would not even recognize their names. Yet, those are the two pitchers the Blue Jays chose over left-hander Ryan Yarbrough for their Opening Day roster, only to designate both for assignment less than a month later.
Yarbrough, after declining a revised offer from the Jays, opted out of his minor-league contract, became a free agent and signed with the New York Yankees. He started out in the Yankees’ bullpen, then joined their injury-depleted rotation in early May and produced a stunning 2.08 ERA in his first five starts before faltering last Saturday against the Boston Red Sox.
As the Jays await the return of righty Max Scherzer and ponder the regression of righty Bowden Francis, they can only wonder how Yarbrough, a pitcher who was firmly under their control, might have fit.
The Jays, winners of 12 of their last 14 games and holding the top wild-card position in the American League, are not exactly suffering. Lefty Eric Lauer, signed to a minor-league deal in December, is proving a reasonable facsimile of Yarbrough. If Scherzer makes a successful return from his right thumb injury by the end of June, the team’s decision on Yarbrough at the end of March might prove little more than a footnote.
Yarbrough is the kind of pitcher who is easy to overlook. His fastball is among the slowest in the majors, averaging just 87.5 mph. Yet Erik Neander, his former president of baseball operations with the Tampa Bay Rays, describes him as “absolutely fearless, incredibly savvy and somebody who gets the absolute most out of their abilities.”
“How do you know someone has special makeup?” Neander asked with a chuckle. “They’re getting guys out in the big leagues throwing 86 mph.”
The Blue Jays, after acquiring Yarbrough last July 30 from the Los Angeles Dodgers for outfielder Kevin Kiermaier and cash, came to understand what makes the pitcher unique. They re-signed him on Feb. 21, and after he triggered his opt-out clause in late March, they had the ability to keep him by adding him to their major-league roster.
The Jays were willing to do that — with a catch. They asked Yarbrough to sign an advance-consent clause, allowing them to release him within the first 45 days of the regular season and terminate the rest of his $2 million guarantee. The Yankees, Yarbrough said, made him the same offer, but with a different incentive structure.
Yarbrough was willing to accept that deal from the Yankees, a team he admired from afar for its ability to get the most out of pitchers. He wasn’t willing to accept it from the Jays, for whom he had a 2.01 ERA in 31 1/3 innings after the trade, pitching in a variety of roles out of the bullpen.
More here.
Movements: Angels call up Christian Moore
There’s quite the youth movement happening in Anaheim. This year, no fewer than 14 players age 25 or younger have suited up for the Halos. Six are currently on the active roster, and here are the numbers of minor-league games they’ve played:

There are some “normal” ones there, but that chart doesn’t include Caden Dana (21 years old, 52 minor-league games), Ben Joyce (24, 47 minor-league games, currently on 60-day IL) or Ryan Johnson (22, five minor-league games) — all of whom have appeared in at least one game for the Angels this year.
There’s about to be another one. Twenty-two-year-old infielder Christian Moore, the No. 8 pick in last year’s draft, is being called up to join the team in Baltimore. Moore was Law’s No. 2 Angels prospect. After struggling in 34 Double-A games this year (.665 OPS), he was promoted to Triple A, where he hit .350/.424/.575 (.999 OPS) with four home runs in 20 games.
Interestingly, while Moore has only played in 79 minor-league games, the call-up is actually later than expected — he was set to debut last September before a knee injury.
The Angels aren’t the only organization to do this sometimes — Wyatt Langford made the Texas Rangers’ Opening Day roster in 2024 after just 44 minor-league games, for example — but they seem to have a more aggressive promotion philosophy than most.
Resurrections: Has the Rangers’ offense risen from the dead?
The story of the 2025 Rangers has been simple: great pitching; the offense stinks.
We’ll need a bigger sample size than six games against the Nationals and a struggling Twins rotation, but any time a team scores 16 runs twice in one series, it’s worth raising an eyebrow and side-eyeing them a little bit.
Emblematic of both the struggle and the renaissance: second baseman Marcus Semien.
Opening Day through May 28 (223 plate appearances): .173/.260/.224 (.485 OPS), three home runs
May 29 through yesterday: (48 PAs) .429/.500/.786 (1.286), four home runs
Semien isn’t alone. Evan Carter has hit home runs in three out of four games. Josh Smith has been red-hot, and Jake Burger has looked like a different player since his short stay in the minor leagues. Six Rangers homered yesterday.
Is it a flash in the pan? Maybe, but their next 18 games should give them a chance to lock in. They face the White Sox, Royals, Pirates, Orioles, Mariners and Orioles again. Every one of those teams is (like the 33-36 Rangers) below .500, save for the Royals (34-34).
Handshakes and High Fives
This is kind of a big deal: While MLB has previously refused to acknowledge any changes to the baseballs, this year, the league admits there’s a difference in how the baseballs are behaving. MLB insists there have been no changes and it’s just as confused as the rest of us.
My favorite read of the day: Matt Gelb has a brilliant profile on the Phillies’ one-of-a-kind starter Zack Wheeler, who does things his own way.
Tyler Kepner’s “Sliders” column starts with MacKenzie Gore and ends with umpire impersonations.
These days, we get heartwarming videos when a prospect is called up. Steve Buckley talked to a few guys whose call-ups happened in the pre-MySpace days.
Mets starter Kodai Senga is headed to the IL with a strained hamstring.
Welcome our new intern Dhani Joseph, who asks: What happens when the pope wears your hat?
Last year’s Tigers surprised people. This year, it’s just who they are, says Britt Ghiroli.
With a month and a half til the trade deadline, who needs what, and how urgently? It’s the Trade Deadline Urgency Index 1.0.
Meanwhile, Jim Bowden gives us 20 deadline-related things he’s hearing.
And lastly, a correction. In yesterday’s Windup, I mentioned a story in the Boston Globe. It was, in fact, the Boston Herald. Apologies. (At least I got the link right?)
On the pods: The “Rates and Barrels” crew asks if the Rangers might consider offers on Jacob deGrom, and highlights some overlooked hitters from this year.
Most-clicked in our last newsletter: Keith Law’s 2025 Mock Draft 2.0, with Oregon State shortstop Aiva Arquette at No. 1.
📫 Love The Windup? Check out The Athletic’s other newsletters.
(Photo: Jeff Hanisch / Imagn Images)
Rec Sports
Ankored Partners with Players Health to Streamline Youth Sports Compliance
“Ankored gives everyone in youth sports a single source of truth for real-time safety and compliance — so organizations can protect kids, reduce risk, and operate with total confidence.” said Seth Lieberman, CEO at Ankored. “This partnership with Players Health is a unique opportunity to help organizations close safety gaps with a 360 degree approach. We’re enabling safety-first environments for young athletes, creating trust and driving long-term participation so sport-focused organizations can scale safely and efficiently.”
Youth sports organizations traditionally rely on multiple disconnected systems to manage compliance, creating confusion, delays, and risk exposure when requirements fall through the cracks. Ankored and Players Health equip leaders so they can see exactly who is cleared, what tasks are incomplete, and where action is needed before athletes step onto the field.
“As leaders in athlete safety, our priority is making compliance easier, clearer, and more actionable for every organization we support,” said Lisa McCoy, AVP of Athlete Safety at Players Health. “Partnering with Ankored allows us to support organizations with solutions that remove administrative barriers and strengthen real-time compliance. This is a meaningful step forward in creating safer environments where athletes can thrive.”
About Ankored
At Ankored, we simplify how youth sports organizations keep players safe and manage risk—so they can focus more on the game. Guardians, coaches, and program administrators benefit from an intuitive workflow that collects and organizes all state- and sport-specific compliance requirements. With a connected ecosystem for registration, background checks, training, and more, sports organizations gain a unified view of their safety-related information. The result? Fewer safety blind spots, less volunteer drop-off, zero system circumvention. Less Paper. More Play. www.ankored.com
About Players Health
Players Health is a sport and fitness safety and risk management company providing risk management services, and insurance products to sport and fitness organizations to empower them to stay ahead of their ever-changing safety, insurance and compliance responsibilities. Working towards establishing the safest environment for all athletes to play the sports they love, Players Health views the health and safety of athletes as a priority in today’s sports landscape. For more information, visit www.playershealth.com.
Media Contact
Amber Stevens, Ankored, Inc, 1 7816906655, [email protected], www.ankored.com
SOURCE Ankored, Inc
Rec Sports
Annual National Girls & Women in Sports Day Event Set for February 7
WASHINGTON – American University Athletics is excited to once again celebrate National Girls and Women in Sports Day (NGWSD) with a free postgame clinic on Saturday, February 7, following the 1 p.m. women’s basketball game against Navy.
Youth in attendance are invited onto the Bender Arena court for hands-on skills sessions led by a range of AU varsity programs — typically including basketball, field hockey, lacrosse, soccer, volleyball, and members of the cheer and dance teams. Kids of all ages can learn new skills and meet AU student-athletes. The clinic is free with a game ticket, and participants are encouraged to wear athletic shoes.
“We’re proud to continue this tradition in honor of National Girls and Women in Sports Day,” said Deputy Athletics Director Katie Benoit. “Sports can shape confidence and resilience, foster teamwork, and inspire young girls and women to pursue their goals. This event is a special opportunity for our student-athletes to share their passion and give back to the community.”
Purchase tickets to the basketball game in advance online for just $7 by using the code “NGWSD26” at checkout by clicking here. Call (202) 885-2617 for more information.
All participants are also asked to register and fill out a waiver prior to the clinic, which can be found HERE.
2025 NGWSD Video
2025 NGWSD Photo Gallery
For the latest on American University Athletics, stay tuned to AUEagles.com and follow us on Twitter (@AUEagles) and Instagram (@AUEagles).
About National Girls and Women in Sports Day
NGWSD is celebrated in all states with community-based events, award ceremonies, & activities honoring the achievements & encouraging participation of girls & women in sports. NGWSD began in 1987 as a day to remember Olympian volleyball player Flo Hyman for her athletic achievements & her work to assure equality for women’s sports.
Rec Sports
Bernalillo County Assessor says Class Action Suit is the Result of Misrepresentation
Bernalillo County – In response to a class action lawsuit filed against the Bernalillo County Assessor, Damian Lara is sending letters to property owners who received incomplete legal representation regarding their trust filings, which resulted in the loss of the 3% cap on their property valuation.
“This is a clear case of property owners wanting to convey their property into a Living Trust – not being properly represented”, says BernCo Assessor Damian Lara. “Many property owners who transferred their properties into a trust were misled or misinformed about the statutory requirement necessary to remain on the 3% cap.”
Typically, in New Mexico by statute, a residential property is capped at a 3% increase unless there’s a change of ownership. Transferring a property into a trust may be considered a change of ownership per state law.
For property owners who consider trusts, a revocable trust must identify only the transferor, a spouse, or a child as the beneficiary of the trust to stay on the 3% cap. In the class action suit, many property owners were removed from the cap because their trust filings did not identify those beneficiaries.
“Approximately 2,000 properties in Bernalillo County were transferred to a revocable trust in 2024,”, says BernCo Assessor Damian Lara. “Of those, only those property owners represented by one attorney continue to have issues. Only 96 properties were identified in the complaint, and of those many have already filed protests and settled their assessments. Those property owners already had their tax bills decreased, including a veteran who now has zero property tax liability”, adds Assessor Lara.
Property owners in Bernalillo County, who missed the protest deadline, have until Jan. 9, 2026 to file a Claim for Refund with the Second Judicial District Court.
Forms to file a Claim for Refund with the District Court are available on the Office of the Assessor website at https://www.bernco.gov/assessor/protest-process/.
You can also go directly to the Second Judicial District Court at 400 Lomas Blvd. NW, first floor, room 119.
Questions regarding the Office of the Bernalillo County Assessor can be directed to A.C.E., the Assessor’s online chatbot at BernCo.gov/Assessor, or speak directly with a customer service representative at 505.222.3700.
# # #
About Bernalillo County
Bernalillo County is 1,160 square miles and is New Mexico’s most populous county with more than 676,000 residents. The Bernalillo County government provides a wide range of public services to residents who live in Albuquerque, Los Ranchos and Tijeras with approximately 106,000 residents living in unincorporated areas of the county. Bernalillo County employs approximately 2,500 people and has an annual operating budget, capital investments and other funds of more than $1 billion. Elected officials include five County Commissioners, Assessor, Clerk, Probate Judge, Sheriff, and Treasurer.
Rec Sports
Beloved referee who officiated youth sports for 30 years dies on court during basketball game
INDIANAPOLIS (WTHR) – The youth sports community in central Indiana is mourning the loss of a beloved referee who died during a high school basketball game.
Witnesses said Jeff Tamarri collapsed on the court after a medical emergency Friday night.
Nicknamed Jeff the Ref, the 63-year-old Tamarri officiated thousands of youth sporting events over more than 30 years.
From the basketball court to the football field, officiating youth sports wasn’t just a job for Tamarri. It was a calling.
“We all love it, but of the people that I know that really love it, Jeff is certainly at the top of that list. He was always out there for the right reasons,” fellow referee Kevin Brown said.
That’s why Tamarri’s sudden death Friday night on the basketball court is so tough.
“He truly died doing what I know he loved,” Brown added.
Jeff the Ref, as the kids called him, connected with thousands of young athletes over three decades in central Indiana. He became an example of integrity, heart and love of the game.
“He had a calming presence, and I always said officials need to lower the temperature in the room,” Brown described. “Some people are really gifted at it. He was really gifted at it.”
Tamarri died just shy of his 64th birthday. He collapsed during a girls’ basketball game at Monrovia High School.
“It was a simple offensive rebound right in the middle of the second quarter, and he turned around to get position on it, and best I can tell, he had some sort of cardiac event,” Brown described.
The medical emergency prompted a massive response at Monrovia High School. The Monroe-Gregg School District superintendent said people in the crowd with medical training, staff and paramedics all tried to save Tamarri’s life. The gym was even cleared so witnesses and responders could work on him.
“I have no doubt in my mind that they did all they could,” Brown said. “Unfortunately, I just don’t think there was much to be done.”

Now, those who knew Tamarri best are honoring his legacy, his big smile, care for kids and his impact on coaches, crowds and colleagues. Those connected with Tamarri said games in Indiana just won’t be the same without Jeff the Ref.
“We’d see a lot of faces, same faces, different sports, so from Grand Park to the youth leagues in Danville and Zionsville is where we worked a lot in the last few years,” Terry Taylor, who refereed with Tamarri, said. “Yeah, there was a lot of upset kids Saturday when they found out.”
Copyright 2025 WTHR via CNN Newsource. All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
Brent “Bundy” Krakau Obituary | The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Brent “Bundy” Krakau, 57, of Bentonville, Ark., passed away peacefully at home on December 14, 2025, surrounded by his loving family. He was born on August 6, 1968, in Euclid, Ohio, and carried Ohio in his heart throughout his life.
Bundy lived with energy, loyalty, and joy, loving deeply and fully.
He was the beloved husband of Stephanie Krakau, with whom he shared 30 years of marriage; the proud father of Lauren (DJ) Pittman and Mason Krakau; and the devoted Papa of Aella and Jolan Pittman.
Bundy grew up in Ohio, attending St. Joseph High School, and went on to study at Marquette University. He later moved to Arkansas, living and working in White Hall for several years, where he was active at Central Baptist Church and deeply involved in youth sports and community service. He and his family eventually settled in Bentonville.
A man of faith, Bundy trusted God through every season of life. He faced glioblastoma with courage and grace, never losing his fighting spirit.
Coaching was one of Bundy’s greatest joys. He poured his heart into every practice and game, teaching his players to improvise, adapt, and overcome, lessons that extended far beyond the field. Bundy was truly one of a kind, and he will be remembered for his passion, humor, and how he inspired others.
He was preceded in death by his parents, James and Jo Ann Krakau.
He is survived by his wife; children; and grandchildren; his siblings, Scott Krakau and Renee (Brian) Borowski of Ohio; his nieces, Anna and Alexis Rubertino; and many extended family members, friends, teammates, and players whose lives he touched.
Visitation will be held Friday, December 19, from 1-3:30 p.m. at Epting Funeral Home in Gravette, with the funeral service to follow. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Bundy’s memory to glioblastoma research or to The CALL in NWA, which supports foster children and families.
Arrangements by Epting Funeral Home. Online Condolences: www.eptingfuneralhome.com
Rec Sports
Oxford American | A Ghost Town Revival
Decades of government missteps helped fuel Picher’s demise. The town’s empty streets now appear as warnings, as the Trump administration fast-tracks new mineral production projects.
In March, the administration issued the executive order Immediate Measures to Increase American Mineral Production, a move intended to “facilitate domestic mineral production to the maximum possible extent.”
Picher is a testament to the myriad human and environmental casualties of rapid and expansive mineral extraction. The town sits on the land where the Quapaw tribe was relocated when they were forced from their Arkansas home. Mining companies paid tribe members to mine beneath their land, or they relied on the Bureau of Indian Affairs to deem the landowners incompetent and sign over the rights.
Today, not far beneath the parade route, not far beneath pretty much any block in Picher, are monstrous caverns. The dark, seemingly endless voids were left behind by room-and-pillar mining, a relatively inefficient form of mining used to remove countless tons of ore, creating rooms supported by large pillars of untouched material.
After undercutting the lead and zinc, miners began blasting and drilling away the valuable material. The metals were shipped off to become, among other things, more than seventy-five percent of the bullets used by the United States military in World War I.
The rooms left behind after the material was removed were vast. A photograph taken somewhere below the Oklahoma-Kansas border, likely in the 1950s, gives an idea.
A miner, dressed in heavy denim, looks up, the wheat lamp on top of his mining helmet pointed nearly vertically. He stands next to a heavy jumbo extension platform, its base sitting on a set of tracks that reach the miner’s waist.
Follow his gaze up ten feet or so. Then another ten. And another. Keep going. Seventy feet up, standing on small platform, is another miner, only his face and the light from his wheat lamp visible. He’s trimming the roof of the mine, extracting every last piece of usable material.
Behind the machinery, dimly lit, is a mountain of refuse, dwarfed by the size of the room’s walls.
In a perfect world, once the rooms were mined, those walls and pillars were left intact, with enough material to safely support the ground, and town, above. But Picher didn’t exist in a perfect world.
When profits began to plummet after World War II, the mining companies bolted, leaving the shafts open and taking with them the sump pumps that kept the mines free of runoff water.
Down came the rain and scavengers. The scavengers went to work on the pillars, chipping away any last dollar they could see and, along with it, the support that the town above relied upon. The rain water and runoff began to fill the open rooms, all 14,000 of them.
The water rolled through the caverns, around and over the seventy million tons of mine tailings and thirty-six million tons of mill sand and sludge. The oxidized minerals began to dissolve, mixing with the water to create an acidic solution that reacted with surrounding rock, further deteriorating the walls and pillars.
The concentrations of heavy metals, iron, lead, nickel, zinc, formed a soupy orange river that coursed through the mines.
In 1979, it reached daylight, seeping from the ground near Commerce. It started spilling from mine workings, abandoned mine shafts, and boreholes.
It came to surface around the chat piles, themselves already a major health concern.
It flowed into Tar Creek, killing most of the biota and staining the bottom of the creek red with ferric hydroxide deposits. The creek, described in 1903 by a Carmelite nun visiting the Quapaw reservation as “a spring of the finest and clearest water,” was now a stream of orange toxicity.
By 1994, an Indian Health Service test showed that thirty-five percent of native children living in the area had levels of lead in their blood that exceeded the CDC’s threshold for health concerns.
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