Le Journal

Batman Blood Snow : Le film tant attendu dévoile enfin son nouveau teaser
Batman Blood Snow : Le film tant attendu dévoile enfin son nouveau teaser L’aventure sombre de Batman dévoile un teaser inédit. Cette animation pour adultes s’inspire des comics en noir et blanc. Plusieurs mois après la clôture de la campagne Ulule, l’équipe de production livre enfin des images inédites. Ce teaser d’introduction fixe immédiatement une ambiance glaciale. Les spectateurs découvrent un Gotham City monochrome sous une tempête de […] Eklecty-City - L'actualité Pop Culture : Analyse et décryptage Cinéma, Séries et Jeux Vidéo

Netflix confirme son virage vers la distribution en salles avec Warner Bros

Netflix sécurise l’achat de Warner Bros. Discovery avec une offre en espèces

Le retour d’Alerte à Malibu se précise avec McG
Le retour d’Alerte à Malibu se précise avec McG Le réseau Fox recrute de nouveaux visages pour sa future série culte et confie la direction du premier épisode au réalisateur McG. La chaîne Fox accélère la production de la nouvelle version d’Alerte à Malibu. Pour diriger ce lancement, le studio choisit le réalisateur McG, connu pour son travail sur la franchise Charlie’s Angels et […] Eklecty-City - L'actualité Pop Culture : Analyse et décryptage Cinéma, Séries et Jeux Vidéo

Cody Bellinger re-ups with the Yankees

2026 Chicago Cubs player profiles: Introduction

MLB owners are reportedly going to push for a salary cap ‘no matter what’

MLB News Outside The Confines: Beltrán, Jones go to Cooperstown
Good morning. In case you haven’t heard, the White Sox and the Mets made a trade late last night. The White Sox sent outfielder Luis Robert Jr. to Queens for infielder Luisangel Acuña and right-hander Truman Pauley. The big news, however, was that outfielders Carlos Beltrán and Andruw Jones were elected to the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. Here are the complete voting results. Anthony DiComo has a recap of Beltrán’s career. Beltrán wis the sixth Puerto Rican to be inducted into Cooperstown. Beltrán has not decided yet whether he wants a Mets or Royals cap on his Hall of Fame plaque. Jake Mintz says Beltrán’s election shows that the voters, at least, have forgiven him for his role in the Astros’ sign-stealing scandal. Mark Bowman looks at Jones’ Hall of Fame career. Jayson Stark has five things that struck him about the Hall of Fame voting. (The Athletic sub. req.) Hall of Fame voting winners and losers according to the ESPN dot com writers. Matt Snyder offers his winners and losers in this year’s ballot. Gabe Lacques has his winners and losers. I’m sensing a trend. Jason Foster has six players who made moves towards induction in future votes. Bob Nightengale wonders why admitted PED-user Andy Pettitte moved towards induction when other tainted candidates have not. He also says if Pettitte gets into Cooperstown, there is no excuse to not elect the many others connected to PED use. He thinks this is a bad thing. Tom Verducci explains his Cooperstown ballot and why his approach has changed. Andrew Simon takes a look at the next five Hall of Fame ballots. Manny Randhawa has four storylines for next year’s Cooperstown vote. Turning to other matters, Evan Drellich reports that other owners are “enraged” by the Dodgers’ deal with Kyle Tucker and are demanding a salary cap. (The Athletic sub. req.) The Dodgers are also reportedly trying to deal for Brewers starter Freddy Peralta. (The Athletic sub. req.) Katie Woo has the details. Ken Rosenthal explains why a potential lockout next seasons is not slowing down signings this year. (The Athletic sub. req.) Mike Axisa ranks all 16 players who would have been free agents this year if they had not signed extensions. He also estimates what they would get on the open market this winter had they entered free agency. One other deal yesterday. The Rockies traded right-hander Bradley Blalock to the Marlins for minor league right-hander Jake Brooks. Ben Clemens evaluates the recent three-way deal between the Reds, Rays and Angels. The Twins have signed free agent catcher Victor Caratini. Kiri Oler breaks down what in store for the Twins and Caratini. Chad Jennings puts all 30 teams into tiers based on how much they are trying to improve this winter. (The Athletic sub. req.) Sad news as former White Sox knuckleballer Wilbur Wood has passed away at 84. Wood put up some insane innings totals from 1971 to 1975—insane even for the early seventies. I also wonder if the knuckleball isn’t dying out. There aren’t many living knuckleballers left. But our condolences go out to Wood’s family, friends and former teammates. Also to the knuckleball. Davy Andrews has an article about pitch models and how (and why) they’re becoming less predictive of success. The Rays took their first step towards a new stadium in Tampa after Hillsborough College voted in favor of a non-binding resolution that would allow the Rays to explore building a stadium at one of their campuses. Eric Fischer has more on what this means and how it could lead to a new stadium for the Rays. Good news as a followup to last week’s story about Angels farmhand Rio Foster, who has badly injured in a traffic accident last year. The Angels have now committed to signing Foster to a minor-league deal, which would keep him on their insurance plan throughout his rehabilitation. (The Athletic sub. req.) And finally, Bryan Hoch has the greatest Yankee player of all time by their uniform number.

Chicago Cubs history unpacked, January 21

Cubs BCB After Dark: Should the Cubs sign Miguel Andujar?

Carlos Beltrán, Andruw Jones elected to the Hall of Fame

Cubs position player pitchers: Frank Schwindel
Frank Schwindel replaced Anthony Rizzo at first base after the big selloff in 2021, and actually hit pretty well: .342/.389/.613 with 13 home runs in 56 games, enough to get him some downballot Rookie of the Year votes. He didn’t hit as well in 2022 and the team, picked over by the selloff, didn’t play very well early on. Thus Schwindel was called on to pitch in three blowouts. The Cubs were losing 12-5 to the Cardinals June 3 at Wrigley Field heading to the ninth inning, so Schwindel was summoned to replace Mark Leiter Jr. And Schwindel threw pretty well for a while, retiring the first two Cardinals he faced. Then Corey Dickerson and Lars Nootbaar homered off him, and Schwindel wound up popping up to end the game. The Cubs lost 14-5. Nine days later the Cubs were visiting Yankee Stadium for the last of a three-game series. In the first of those games, the Cubs lost 2-1 in 13 innings, using nine pitchers. The second contest was an 8-0 blowout, with Matt Swarmer and Michael Rucker taking one for the team, Swarmer serving up a team record six home runs. So when the Yankees started pounding Cubs pitching in that third game of the series, Schwindel warmed up his pitching arm again. The Cubs trailed 17-4 going into the ninth inning. That’s when Schwindel threw this ridiculous pitch [VIDEO]. Your browser does not support the video tag. The pitch was — and I believe remains — the slowest pitch ever measured in the pitch tracking era (since 2008) that was hit for a home run. Weird, but fun. The Cubs lost the game 18-4. It was the sixth loss in what would become a 10-game losing streak. Three days later, the Cubs were being blown out again, this time at Wrigley Field against the Padres, in what would become the ninth loss in that streak. They were losing 16-5 when Schwindel entered to throw the ninth. Schwindel surrendered another homer, this one to Luke Voit, and two more runs, making the final score Padres 19, Cubs 5. That streak was one of the most dreadful in Cubs history. The Cubs lost the three games in which Schwindel pitched by a combined score of 51-14, and from the first of those three games through the end of that 10-game losing streak, the Cubs went 1-11 and were outscored 105-41. That wasn’t a good Cubs season. But at least Schwindel entertained us, a bit, anyway.
