Who Are Cam Schlittler, Connelly Early? Rookie Starting Pitchers Who Are Starting Win Or Go Home Game 3 Of Wild Card Series For New York, Boston Thursday Night In Bronx New York
Who are Cam Schlittler, Connelly Early?
Rookie starting pitchers who are starting win or go home game 3 of wild card series for New York the team that wears the pinstripes, Boston Thursday night in Bronx New York.
Where?
On the mound!
Cam Schlittler was drafted as the 220th pick in seventh round of 2022 MLB Draft out of Northwestern!
Connelly Early was drafted as the 151st pick in round 5 of 2023 MLB Draft out of Virginia!
Cam Schlittler made his MLB debut on Wednesday July 9, 2025!
Connelly Early made his MLB debut on Tuesday September 9, 2025!
During regular season Cam Schlittler finished with record of 4-3 with an earn run average of 2.96 because on Saturday September 27, 2025 when opposing Baltimore in Bronx New York Cam Schlittler got the win pitching 7.0 innings surrendering 2 hits, 0 earned runs, 1 walk while striking out 9 Baltimore batters.
During regular season Connelly Early finished with record of 1-2 with an earn run average of 2.33 because on the same date Cam Schlittler got the win when opposing Baltimore in Bronx New York Connelly Early took the loss when opposing Detroit pitching 5.0 innings surrendering 4 hits, 2 earned runs, 1 walk while striking out 7 Detroit batters.
Though,
Could mother nature prevent game 3 of Wild Card Series from happening as scheduled from rookie starting pitchers Cam Schlittler , Connelly Early from starting as scheduled from either New York the team that wears the pinstripes the opportunity to advance to ALDS to oppose Toronto?
There isn’t a chance of that happening because at first pitch it’s mostly clear with 0% chance of rain an hour following first pitch it’s mostly clear with 0% chance of rain at 10:00pm it’s mostly clear with 0% chance of rain at 11:00pm when the game is supposed to be over it’s mostly clear with 0% chance of rain.
According to Accuweather on ESPN App
New York the team that wears the pinstripes comes into game 3 of Wild Card Series with record of 94-68 is going to be looking to advance to ALDS in win or go game 3 to oppose Toronto who like them , Boston is a member of American League East because they evened up Wild Card Series at one game a piece on Wednesday night with 4-3 win in Bronx New York because in the bottom of 8th inning Austin Wells who is catcher singled to right scoring second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr..
Austin Wells singling to right scoring Jazz Chisholm Jr. helped New York the team that wears the pinstripes avoid elimination with 4-3 win over Boston Wednesday Force game 3 of Wild Card Series Thursday in Bronx New York. Before Austin Wells singling to right scoring Jazz Chisholm Jr. Ben Rice who is first baseman who sometimes catches pitchers behind the plate as well hit home run to right 364 feet scoring left fielder Cody Bellinger giving New York the team that wears the pinstripes a 2-0 lead before Boston evened the score at 2-2 as Trevor Story who is shortstop singled to center scoring left fielder Jared Duran , center fielder Ceddanne Rafaela . In the bottom of 5th inning Aaron Judge who is captain, right fielder for New York the team that wears the pinstripes singled to left scoring center fielder Trent Grisham giving New York the team that wears the pinstripes a 3-2 lead . Though that lead would be brief as Trevor Story would even the game up at 3-3 hitting home run to center 381 feet in top of 6th inning.
According to espn app
Austin Wells singling to right scoring Jazz Chisholm Jr. helping New York the team that wears the pinstripes avoid elimination with 4-3 win over Boston force game 3 of Wild Card Series Wednesday in Bronx New York offensively supported Carlos Rodon who started who pitched 6.0 innings surrendering 4 hits, 3 earned runs , 3 walks while striking out 6 Boston batters . Fernando Cruz who relieved Carlos Rodon who pitched 1.0 innings surrendering 1 hit, 0 earned runs , 0 walks while striking out 0 Boston batters . Devin Williams who relieved Fernando Cruz who pitched 1.0 innings surrendering 1 hit, 0 earned runs , 0 walks while striking out 1 Boston batter .David Bednar who relieved Devin Williams who pitched 1.0 innings surrendering 0 hits, 0 earned runs , 0 walks while striking out 2 Boston batters.
According to ESPN App
Following Austin Wells singling to right scoring Jazz Chisholm Jr. helping New York the team that wears the pinstripes avoid elimination with 4-3 win over Boston, Force game 3 of Wild Card Series Wednesday night in Bronx New York Jazz Chisholm who scored on Austin Wells single Jazz Chisholm Jr. had this to say!
We always put everything out there on the line, especially in the playoffs,”You don’t want to have any space or give another team a little bit of an edge. Obviously, I think it was a must-win.”
Following Austin Wells singling to right scoring Jazz Chisholm Jr. helping New York the team that wears the pinstripes avoid elimination with 4-3 win over Boston, Force game 3 of Wild Card Series Wednesday night in Bronx New York Fernando Cruz who relieved Carlos Rodon who pitched 1.0 innings surrendering 1 hit, 0 earned runs , 0 walks while striking out 0 Boston batters had this to say about his teammate, second baseman!
want to make sure it’s mentioned: Jazz saved us the game, completely
Following Austin Wells singling to right scoring Jazz Chisholm Jr. helping New York the team that wears the pinstripes avoid elimination with 4-3 win over Boston, Force game 3 of Wild Card Series Wednesday night in Bronx New York Aaron Judge who is captain, right fielder had this to say about his teammate, second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. !
What do you expect? The guy is a game-changer,”“It just shows you the maturity, to take what happened the day before and bring it into today’s game. He showed up ready to play today and ended up having the biggest plays for us throughout the night.”
Following Austin Wells singling to right scoring Jazz Chisholm Jr. helping New York the team that wears the pinstripes avoid elimination with 4-3 win over Boston, Force game 3 of Wild Card Series Wednesday night in Bronx New York Ben Rice who was first baseman who catches pitchers behind the plate too had this to say about about his home run!
Being able to set the tone early for us in the first inning and give us a lead, I know I was able to get the boys fired up,”
According to Bryan Hoch MLB article https://www.mlb.com/yankees/news/yankees-win-al-wild-card-game-2-2025
Boston comes into game 3 of Wild Card Series with record of 89-73 also going to be looking to advance to ALDS in win or go home game 3 to oppose Toronto who like them , Boston is a member of American League East because they won the first game of wild card series 3-1 on Tuesday night in Bronx New York because because Masataska Yoshida who is left fielder who was designated hitter for Boston who singled to center scoring center fielder Ceddanine Rafaela first baseman Nick Sogard who was playing second base giving Boston a 2-1 lead in top of 7th inning before third baseman Alex Bregman doubled to left scoring shortstop Trevor Story.
According to espn app
Following Boston winning game 1 of Wild Card Series 3-1 Tuesday night in Bronx New York third baseman Alex Bregman had this to say about Garrett Crochet who started who pitched 7.2 innings surrendering 4 hits, 1 earned run , 0 walks while striking out 11 New York the team that wears the pinstripes batters!
He was aggressive. You could see it in his eyes before the game that he wanted it badly,“It was a performance that big-time pitchers make, and that's who he is, and I am super proud of him.”
Following Boston winning game 1 of Wild Card Series 3-1 Tuesday night in Bronx New York manager Alex Cora had this to say about his starting pitcher Garrett Crochet!
[Crochet] is a guy that wants it bad, to be honest with you,”“He was in a situation last year where he was learning how to become a starter. He got traded to become the ace. He got paid like an ace, and since Day One he has acted like that.”
According to Ian Browne MLB article https://www.mlb.com/redsox/news/red-sox-win-al-wild-card-game-1-2025
The game is going to be televised on ESPN with David Cone, Buster Olney Eduardo Perez, Karl Ravech commentating!
Five-time World Series Champion and former Cy Young Award Winner David Cone was named to ESPN’s Sunday Night Baseball booth in 2022. He joined Karl Ravech, the fourth-ever voice of Sunday Night Baseball, and veteran analyst, player and coach, Eduardo Pérez, to form ESPN’s Sunday Night Baseball team.
In Cone’s 17 years in Major League Baseball, he had a 194-126 record with a 3.46 ERA and 2,668 strikeouts. He won his first World Series title with the Toronto Blue Jays in 1992 and went on to win four with the New York Yankees in 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000. In 1999, Cone etched his name into the record books when he pitched the sixteenth perfect game in MLB history.
The Kansas City native was drafted by his hometown team, the Royals, in 1981. He returned to the Royals in 1993, and went on to win the American League Cy Young Award in 1994.
In addition to his position as an analyst on ESPN’s Sunday Night Baseball, Cone serves as an analyst on the YES Network and hosts a pitching podcast, Toeing the Slab with David Cone.Veteran Major League Baseball player and coach Eduardo Pérez was named to ESPN’s Sunday Night Baseball team in 2022. He serves as an analyst on ESPN’s exclusive, national Major League Baseball game of the week alongside five-time World Series Champion David Cone and play-by-play voice Karl Ravech.
Pérez has been an analyst on the Baseball Tonight: Sunday Night Countdown team and Béisbol Esta Noche on ESPN Deportes, and regularly appeared as an analyst during Monday Night Baseball and Wednesday Night Baseball telecasts. He was previously an analyst at ESPN from 2006 through 2010 and returned to ESPN in 2014.
Pérez has also been a signature analyst in ESPN’s international MLB game coverage, calling historic games in Cuba, Japan, Puerto Rico and Mexico. He served as an analyst in ESPN’s KBO League 2020 regular season coverage. Pérez has also been an analyst in ESPN’s innovative, data-driven Statcast alternative viewing experiences that surround signature MLB events such as the Home Run Derby and Wild Card game.
Pérez served as bench coach of the Houston Astros (2013) and hitting coach of the Miami Marlins (2011-12). In 2008, Pérez was named Manager of the Year in the Puerto Rico Baseball League, leading the Leones De Ponce to the league championship. He also managed Colombia in the World Baseball Classic qualifying round in 2013.
Pérez spent 13 seasons (1993-2006) in the Major Leagues, primarily as a first baseman, for the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, St. Louis Cardinals, Cincinnati Reds, Tampa Bay Rays, Cleveland Indians and Seattle Mariners. Pérez had his best season in 1997 while with Cincinnati, reaching career highs in home runs (16), RBI (52) and games (106).
Pérez was drafted in the first round by the Angels in 1991 after leading the Florida State University Seminoles to the College World Series that same season. His father, Tony Pérez, is a Baseball Hall of Famer.
Robert “Buster” Olney is the reporter for ESPN’s exclusive Sunday Night Baseball telecasts and the host of the popular Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney podcast. He is also a senior writer for ESPN.com. The veteran baseball insider joined ESPN in June 2003 to cover the sport for all ESPN entities, including ESPN Radio, ESPNEWS and SportsCenter.
Olney’s two favorite events he has covered for ESPN are the 2014 and 2016 postseasons. “Particularly,” he said, “the historic performances of Madison Bumgarner.”
Olney began covering baseball in 1989 as the Nashville Banner’s beat reporter for the Triple-A Nashville Sounds. He later covered the San Diego Padres for the San Diego Union-Tribune (1993 – 1994) and the Baltimore Orioles (Baltimore Sun, 1995 – 1996). He arrived at ESPN after six years at the New York Times covering the Mets (1997) and the Yankees (1998 – 2001).
Olney realized he wanted to build a career around sports writing when Red Smith, a Pulitzer Prize winning sports columnist for the New York Times, came and spoke at his high school.
“When I was 15, I had just started to figure out that I wasn’t going to be able to play power forward for the Lakers at 5-foot-7 3/8, nor was I going to be the second baseman for the Dodgers,” Olney said. “As Red told stories, it was apparent how much he loved his job—and immediately, I was inspired, because I loved sports, loved to write and possessed a curiosity about people. Within a couple of weeks, I started writing for my high school paper, and knew what I wanted to do.”
Olney has also authored the Times’ bestseller, The Last Night of the Yankee Dynasty: The Game, the Team, and the Cost of Greatness (HarperCollins 2004), a book about the Paul O’Neill/Tino Martinez Yankees’ dynasty of 1996 – 2001.
Olney also ranked in the Associated Press Game Story Top 10 from 1996 – 1998.
His favorite childhood sports memory comes from a special day with his uncle: “When I was 11 years old, my Uncle Bob arranged for me to see a playoff game at Fenway Park — Game 1 of the American League Championship Series, with Boston’s Luis Tiant on the mound against the dynasty Athletics, 1975,” Olney described. “But the great treat for me was that I got to watch the game sitting next to Uncle Bob’s friend — Pee Wee Reese, who had played for my favorite team, the Dodgers. I have always wished that I knew enough about Pee Wee’s relationship with Jackie Robinson that I had asked him about it. But it was an incredible experience, and I still have the scorecard pages from that day, with Pee Wee’s autograph.”
A native of Randolph Center, VT, Olney graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1988 with a degree in history.
Veteran ESPN commentator Karl Ravech is the voice of Sunday Night Baseball, ESPN’s exclusive, national Major League Baseball game of the week, calling games alongside analysts Eduardo Perez and David Cone and reporter Buster Olney.
Ravech joined ESPN in May 1993. His three decades of covering MLB for the network have included hosting ESPN’s studio coverage of the MLB playoffs and World Series since 1995, hosting ESPN’s MLB studio and pre-game show, Baseball Tonight, and serving as play-by-play commentator for Monday Night Baseball and for ESPN’s 2020 KBO League season coverage. He has also been the voice of ESPN’s Home Run Derby telecast since 2017.
Since 2006, Ravech has provided commentary for ESPN and ABC coverage of the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pa. In 2011, he added the Little League World Series Championship games and the College World Series to his yearly schedule. During the winter, Ravech is a play-by-play commentator on ESPN’s college basketball telecasts and has called the SEC basketball tournament since 2017.
Ravech has also anchored ESPN’s college basketball studio wraps operation. Additionally, in the fall of 2000, Ravech followed Tiger Woods’ quest for the Grand Slam while hosting ESPN’s golf coverage at Pebble Beach, St. Andrews and Valhalla.
In November of 1998, Ravech was playing a pickup game of basketball with friends from ESPN when he noticed a sharp pain in his chest. After receiving medical attention, the doctor informed Karl he had experienced a heart attack at the age of 33.
“That experience was a wake-up call,” said Ravech. “Now, through exercise and proper diet, my heart is as strong as a professional athlete. I run every day. Who knows why these things happen, but it changed me for the better.”
Prior to joining the network, Ravech served as the weekend sports anchor/reporter at WHTM-TV in Harrisburg, Pa. (1990-93). His assignments included the 1992 Senior U.S. Open golf tournament, Harrisburg Senators (Washington Nationals’ Double-A affiliate), and MLB spring training. He was nominated for a local Sports Emmy in 1990 and 1991.
From 1987 to 1990, Ravech was employed by WBNG-TV, in Binghamton, N.Y., as a sports anchor/reporter with assignments including the 1988 U.S. Open golf tournament.
Ravech served as the sports director at NewsCenter 7 in Ithaca, N.Y., and as a freelance sports producer for WCVB-TV in Boston (1986-87), while attending college.
Ravech received his Bachelor of Science degree in communications from Ithaca College in 1987. He received his master’s degree in management and leadership in 1990, from SUNY at Binghamton.
According to https://espnpressroom.com/us/bios/david-cone/
https://espnpressroom.com/us/bios/eduardo-perez/
https://espnpressroom.com/us/bios/olney_buster/
https://espnpressroom.com/us/bios/ravech_karl/