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Dylan listen to injuries: Padres 'not excessively worried' after star leaves against Yankees begin with cramp

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The right-handed man of San Diego Padres, Dylan, brought a no-hitter to the seventh in the seventh on Wednesday evening to lose the New York Yankees (boxing score) before he was injured with an obvious injury. Ceas was on the show that shook his throwing arm, but after the game manager, Mike Shildt said that the training staff was not too concerned about what she was diagnosed as a cramp.

“The training staff is not excessively concerned, a little cramp,” said Shildt, adding that the Witsch wanted to continue to record.

Cease delivered 6 ⅓ no-hit innings before giving up Cody Bellinger a Homerun with the game. He stayed in the game, pushed out Anthony Volpe and worked in a 1-2 count before leaving Jasson Domínguez halfway. The Padres then added the reliever Jason Adam to close the seventh and keep the tie.

Cease's last line at night only let him give up one run on one goal. Otherwise, he excluded nine of the 24 batteries with which he was exposed to, while only two walks on 89 parking spaces.

As an impending free agent, Cease was entered in a 5.61 ERA (74 ERA+) and a rate-to-walk ratio of 2.60 ERA in the first seven starts. CBS Sports wrote more about Cease's fights at the beginning of this week. Here is part of our analysis:

Cease has some remarkable events under the bonnet. He has reduced his arm angle and has more arm movement to his four-seater-normally the pitch is more vertical. The Cape sweeper lacks the same depth that has shown last season, and it is clearly struggling to find his curve ball where he wants it and had only 45.8% of the offer for strikes throw him (in contrast to more than 56% in the past two years).

The Padres came into the game on Wednesday evening with a 23-12 record a year and put them back half a game of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League West. The Padres are, among other things, without starter Yu Darvish, Joe Musgrove and Matt Waldron, which indicates that they can hardly afford to lose another arm on the shelf.

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