Quintana Named to American League All-Star Team

It’s a special first for Jose Quintana

The 27-year-old Colombian professional baseball player, a pitcher for the Chicago White Sox, has replaced the Cleveland IndiansDanny Salazar on the American League All-Star roster.

Jose Quintana

A first-time All-Star, Quintana is 7-8 with a 3.21 ERA, sixth in the AL at the start of Sunday. He joins teammate Chris Sale on the AL roster.

Kansas City‘s Wade Davis, Boston‘s Craig Kimbrel and Toronto‘s Marco Estrada also were dropped from the AL pitching staff because of injuries, and Cleveland’s Corey Kluber and Toronto’s Aaron Sanchez were added.

In the National League, Los AngelesClayton Kershaw and New York‘s Noah Syndergaard got hurt and won’t pitch, along with Stephen Strasburg, who just came off the disabled list, and San Francisco‘s Madison Bumgarner, who starts Sunday. New York’s Bartolo Colon, San Diego‘s Drew Pomeranz and Washington‘s Max Scherzer were added.

In the infield, Aledmys Diaz replaced St. Louis teammate Matt Carpente. In the outfield, Cincinnati’s Jay Bruce and Pittsburgh‘s Starling Marte replaced the Mets’ Yoenis Cespedes and Chicago‘s Dexter Fowler.

Miami‘s Marcell Ozuna and Colorado‘s Carlos Gonzalez entered the starting lineup in place of Cespedes and Fowler.

Estrada Agrees to Two-Year, $26M Deal with the Toronto Blue Jays

Marco Estrada is staying put…

The 32-year-old Mexican professional baseball pitcher has agreed to a $26 million, two-year contract to remain with the Toronto Blue Jays.

Marco Estrada

The team announced the agreement minutes before the deadline for Estrada to accept the Blue Jay’s $15.8 million qualifying offer for a one-year contract.

Estrada was 13-8 with a 3.13 ERA, setting career bests for wins, ERA and opponents’ batting average. He was 2-1 with a 2.33 ERA in the playoffs, Toronto’s first postseason appearance since 1993.

“We obviously identified Marco as a priority to bring back after the season he had,” interim general manager Tony LaCava said during a conference call. “He was a big part of our success. We think that he can maintain that level of performance, maybe not to the level that he did this year, but certainly someone we can count on going forward who can help us defend the AL East title.”

Estrada gets a $1 million signing bonus payable by January 29 and salaries of $11 million next year and $14 million in 2017.

Estrada began 2015 in the bullpen but joined the rotation in early May after left-hander Daniel Norris was demoted to Triple-A. Estrada went winless in his first five starts then was 12-5 the rest of the way, beginning with a four-start winning streak between June 2 and June 19.

“He never looked back,” LaCava said. “He just continued to get stronger and stronger throughout the season.”

Estrada’s final start of the year was among his strongest. With Toronto facing elimination against the Kansas City Royals in the AL Championship Series, Estrada pitched one-hit ball into the eighth inning to help the Blue Jays win 7-1 in Game 5.

An eight-year veteran, Estrada has also pitched for Washington Nationals and the Milwaukee Brewers. He joined the Blue Jays in a November 2014 trade that sent first baseman Adam Lind to the Brewers.

Garza In Talks to Join the Milwaukee Brewers

Matt Garza’s career prospects are brewing

The 30-year-old Mexican American professional baseball pitcher is reportedly in serious talks with the Milwaukee Brewers.

Matt Garza

Despite media reports, Garza, currently a free-agent, and the team haven’t made an official deal yet.

The Brewers issued a statement Thursday evening following reports of a $52 million, four-year agreement between the Brewers and the right-hander, pending a physical.

The statement says “despite media reports, negotiations between the Brewers and Matt Garza are ongoing, but there is no deal yet.”

Garza pitched for the Chicago Cubs most of the past three seasons before Chicago dealt him to the Texas Rangers at last July’s trade deadline.

Garza will step into a Milwaukee rotation that includes holdovers Kyle Lohse, Yovani Gallardo, Wily Peralta and Marco Estrada.