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Red Sox legend David Ortiz elected to Baseball Hall of Fame as part of 2022 class

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The results for this year’s Baseball Hall of Fame voting are in!

Longtime Boston Red Sox great David Ortiz was announced as the lone player to be elected into the Hall of Fame as part of the 2022 class. He was just the fourth primary designated hitter to get voted in, and only the 58th player inducted in his first year of consideration.

Ortiz, who was on the ballot for the first time this year, received 77.5% of votes from the Baseball Writers Association of America (surpassing the 75% threshold required to make it into Cooperstown).

The 46-year old was beyond excited about getting voted into the Hall of Fame, but admits the thought of even being good enough never entered his mind back when he began his professional baseball career.

“It’s something I really never dreamed of it,” said Ortiz.

“I was the type of player, I know I got the talent, but all I was looking for was the opportunity to be an everyday player.”

Ortiz, a native of Dominican Republic, posted a .286 batting average, .931 OPS, 541 homers and 1768 RBI over a span of 20 seasons and 2408 combined games split between the Minnesota Twins and Red Sox from 1997-2016.

During his illustrious career, he was selected to 10 MLB All-Star games, and was a seven-time Silver Slugger Award winner, three-time World Series champion, three-time AL RBI leader, and a two-time AL Hank Aaron Award winner. He also has a World Series MVP, ALCS MVP, and AL Home Run award winner under his belt.

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Nationals have “made it clear” they are not trading Juan Soto

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Washington Nationals fans can breathe a sigh of relief…for now.

Nationals general manager Mike Rizzo squashed recent rumours suggesting Juan Soto’s time in the Nation’s capital could be coming to an end, saying during an interview with a local radio station that the team will not be trading their superstar slugger under any circumstances.

“We are not trading Juan Soto…We have made it clear to his agent and to the player. … These journalists have to fill a blank sheet of paper every day. It’s a good thing to get some attention on a story. But we have every intention of building this team around Juan Soto.” said Rizzo.

“We’ve spoken to his agent many, many times (and) recently sat with him when he was in Washington, D.C. Made it clear to him that we are not interested in trading him, and I guess the rest of the world just doesn’t believe it.”

Lets face it: the Nationals are in rebuild mode and Soto’s contract expires in a few years. He reported turned down a massive 13-year, $350-million contract extension over the summer, and is in the prime of his career. Adding this all up, you would think the Nationals would at least explore the idea of trading him and getting a kings ransom for him in order to set themselves up nicely for their next contention window.

But if you believe in Rizzo’s words, the team feels they still have a chance at convincing him to stay and believe he will be able to still contribute in a big way once they get good again.

The 23-year old has amassed .294/.426/.539 slash line to go along with 107 homers and 328 RBI in just four-plus seasons in the majors. He has also won two Silver Slugger Awards, an NL batting title, a World Series title, and was recently a runner-up for NL MVP in 2021.

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Veteran lefty JA Happ retires from baseball after 15 MLB seasons

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Longtime MLB pitcher JA Happ is calling it quits after an exceptional career.

The 39-year old lefty officially announced his decision to retire from baseball during an appearance on the ‘Heart Strong Podcast’.

“I didn’t maybe feel what I needed to feel in order to think I wanted to keep doing this. I felt like that was a sign, like ’OK, it’s time to go,'” said Happ.

“I think I’m still processing it, but I do wake up feeling good about it, and I’m happy to start the process of being a full-time dad, for the time being, at the very least.”

Happ pitched 15 seasons in the MLB with eight different teams, most notably the Toronto Blue Jays, Philadelphia Phillies, New York Yankees and Houston Astros.

During his career, he posted an 89-63 record, 4.23 ERA, 1.30 WHIP, 1095 strikeouts and 397 walks over a span of 1226.2 innings pitched.

He was noted for being a reliable and consistent back of the rotation type of starter who peaked later in his career, making his lone MLB All-Star appearance in 2018.

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Baseball

MUST WATCH: Aaron Judge wins it for the Yankees with a walk-off three-run blast!

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The Toronto Blue Jays were up by two runs heading into the bottom of the 9th with one of the best closers in the game in Jordan Romano taking the mound.

You would think it was almost a 100% certainty that the Blue Jays would end up with the win.

Unfortunately for them, New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge had other plans!

Surprisingly, this was the first walk-off bomb in Judge’s career.

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