A look back at June blooms, swoons MLB
Interleague action benefited the AL, Jim Edmonds benefited from Chicago, and home cooking benefited nearly everyone.
Interleague action benefited the AL, Jim Edmonds benefited from Chicago, and home cooking benefited nearly everyone.
Interleague rivalries in L.A., Chicago and New York have their own flavors, along with varying degrees of intrigue.
The White Sox talked a lot and were swept by the Cubs two weeks ago. Guillen hasn't learned.
Manager oversees his ballclub with fairness and consistency, yet he knows that each player requires a different touch.
Three are fired in four days, mostly because they were the most expendable pieces in franchises with much deeper problems.
Manager followed GM Bill Bavasi to the unemployment line, and unproductive players could be next.
Teams still have more than a month to make trades, but already GMs' phone lines are buzzing with prospective deals.
Mets' GM fired manager Willie Randolph in an Anaheim hotel because he was expected to do so.
Willie Randolph couldn't win enough with the Mets' overrated roster. Now it's Jerry Manuel's mess to clean up.
Embattled Mets manager presides over a victory in Anaheim, yet he could be out of a job any day.
The former punching bags from Tampa Bay have become a brawling bunch that will gladly accept suspensions as a sign of arrival.
Baseball's top switch-hitters take different approaches, yet their results are startlingly similar.
Free of court appearances until next year, Barry Bonds finds himself radioactive even in a permissive league.
Thirty living players as old as 102 will be drafted by MLB teams in Orlando before the amateur draft begins.
Hamstring injury behind him, Pedro throws six innings and 109 pitches in win over the Giants.
The Rays, Jays and Rangers stepped up their game while the struggling Tigers and Yankees are glad it's now June.