SAN DIEGO (AP) — Padres reliever Jason Adam ruptured a tendon in his left quadriceps and was carted off the field Monday, a major blow to San Diego's dominant bullpen.
Adam was injured in the seventh inning of a 4-3 loss to the Baltimore Orioles. One of several All-Star relievers on the team, Adam said he still needs to get an MRI for confirmation “but that sounds like six to nine months, so the season's probably done."
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Fans applaud as San Diego Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam leaves in a cart after falling with an injury during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
San Diego Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam, second from left, reacts alongside manager Mike Shildt as he leaves in a cart after falling with an injury during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
San Diego Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam leaves in a cart after falling with an injury during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
San Diego Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam holds his leg after falling with an injury during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
San Diego Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam holds his leg after falling with an injury during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
The injury comes as the Padres are chasing the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL West. The loss dropped the Padres 2 1/2 games behind the idle Dodgers. San Diego currently holds the second National League wild-card spot.
The Padres became the first big league team to send three relievers to the All-Star Game when Adam, closer Robert Suarez and left-hander Adrián Morejón were selected for the Midsummer Classic.
Among general manager A.J. Preller's several trade-deadline pickups was hard-throwing Mason Miller from the Athletics, who was an All-Star in 2024.
“I told A.J., I'm really glad you went out and got Mason," said Adam, who was on crutches with his left leg in a big brace when he spoke with reporters. "That's all I've really processed. This bullpen's so deep. Of all the bullpens in the league to not need me, it's this one. So I'm excited to cheer those guys on. It's a family out there, so I'm excited.”
Adam collapsed as he tried to turn toward Gunnar Henderson's chopper that went off the mound for an infield single. He immediately signaled for an athletic trainer and grabbed his left knee.
After receiving attention from trainers, Adam was helped to his feet and onto a cart, with his left leg propped up on the seat. Cameras caught Adam saying he “felt something pop.”
“I felt the pop right away, felt like the quad rolled up, so I kind of knew it wasn't good," Adam said. "It was in pain at first and then you kind of come to and you're like, ‘Hey, did we get the out?’ And then it's just waiting to hear how long.”
Adam said he “went to plant to go back and grab the ball, because it was kind of a chopper to my right, and that's when I felt the pop and it kind of gave out and I fell.”
Adam (8-4) took the loss. He has a 1.93 ERA in 65 appearances.
The game was tied at 3 when Henderson's hit put runners on first and second. Adam was replaced by Suarez, who got the second out of the inning before allowing Dylan Beavers' go-ahead single.
Miller called Adam's injury “really heartbreaking.”
“You hate to see anybody go down with anything, especially something like that. It's just a baseball oddity, a slow-hit ball like that. It's nothing he did, just his instincts taking over," Miller said.
“In his absence, guys are going to have to step up and fill that role. We certainly have guys like that.”
Said starter Dylan Cease: “It seems like he pitches every day. He's been amazing. It's terrible to see.”
Padres manager Mike Shildt called Adam “an absolute workhorse" who has "gotten huge outs for us.”
Shildt also said Adam is a leader in the clubhouse.
“We've got a great clubhouse. We've got great dudes. I love him to death. Jason is as solid a guy as there is. He's well-respected and means a lot to us. We'll miss him and we'll have to figure it out,” Shildt said.
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Fans applaud as San Diego Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam leaves in a cart after falling with an injury during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
San Diego Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam, second from left, reacts alongside manager Mike Shildt as he leaves in a cart after falling with an injury during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
San Diego Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam leaves in a cart after falling with an injury during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
San Diego Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam holds his leg after falling with an injury during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
San Diego Padres relief pitcher Jason Adam holds his leg after falling with an injury during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
DALLAS (AP) — Sen. John Cornyn stood in the shadow of the U.S.-Mexico border wall for a campaign event, but the Texas Republican didn’t offer the kind of diatribe about illegal immigration that stokes his party’s core and fueled Donald Trump’s rise to the White House.
Instead, Cornyn, in his courtly Houston drawl, politely thanked Trump for billions in federal dollars to reimburse Texans for work on the wall, praising “the president of the United States, to whom I am very grateful.”
Cornyn's characteristic calm and measured comments betrayed the urgency of the moment for the four-term senator. He's facing the political fight of his long career against two Republicans who claim closer ties to Trump and his MAGA movement and tend more toward fiery rhetoric. Now, Cornyn could become the first Republican Texas senator to lose renomination in a race that may reflect what GOP primary voters are looking for in their elected officials — and what it takes to survive in Trump’s Republican Party.
Some say the 73-year-old former Texas Supreme Court justice represents a bygone era in the GOP. Still, Cornyn, supporters and the Senate’s Republican leadership are fighting aggressively for an edge in the March 3 primary. They have spent tens of millions of dollars, much of it against his opponents, Attorney Gen. Ken Paxton and Rep. Wesley Hunt — both self-styled Trump Republicans.
“We’ve got enough performance artists here in Washington,” Cornyn told The Associated Press, “people who think serving as a representative in the world’s most distinguished representative body — that what qualifies them — is they are loud, they are active on social media and they get a lot of attention.”
Paxton entered the race in April, having emerged from legal troubles that had shadowed his political rise, including beating a 2023 impeachment trial on corruption charges and reaching a deal to end a long-running securities fraud case.
The three-term attorney general has portrayed the investigations against him as persecution by the political establishment, much like Trump has. He contends Cornyn has “completely lost touch with Texas.”
Hunt is still working to raise his profile in Texas. The two-term House member often touts his early endorsement of Trump's 2024 comeback campaign.
Of Cornyn, Hunt recently said, “His moment has passed.”
Hunt's entry in the race last fall made it more likely that no candidate will win at least 50% of the primary vote, sending the top two finishers to a May runoff. The nominee would face the winner of the Democratic primary between Rep. Jasmine Crockett and state Rep. James Talarico.
Mike Fleming, an 80-year-old retired sales manager who attended a recent Hunt campaign event, said Cornyn is a good man but has spent “a lot of his time trying to run for head of the Senate.” Cornyn unsuccessfully ran for Senate majority leader after the 2024 elections.
“If he was the only guy, I would vote for him,” Fleming said.
Cornyn and aligned super PACs have heavily outspent Paxton and Hunt, investing more than $30 million since last summer on television advertising, much of it criticizing his rivals, according to the ad-tracking service AdImpact.
Senate Republican leaders, however, have worried that Paxton, as the nominee, would be costly to defend in the general election. Cornyn's situation is more about a shift in Republican campaign priorities and what candidates need to do to win a GOP primary.
“He plays the part of the distinguished statesman. And that’s what he’s always been,” said Wayne Hamilton, a former executive director of the Texas Republican Party. “But anymore, you have to be very loud about the opposition. And that’s just not him.”
Cornyn also fights a perception among some GOP voters that he’s a moderate.
“He hasn’t been consistent in his conservative representation in his voting,” said Robyn Richardson, 50, from suburban Dallas.
Some Texas conservatives remain angry about Cornyn's work as the GOP’s negotiator on gun restrictions in a 2022 law in the weeks after the shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, where 19 students and two teachers were killed. Democrats narrowly controlled Congress and hoped to enact major changes under President Joe Biden.
The measure didn't go as far as Democrats wanted, but the bipartisan bill was the widest-ranging gun measure passed by Congress in decades. Some Republicans wanted any bill blocked, and a week before its passage, some GOP activists booed Cornyn as he took the stage at a state convention.
Some point to Cornyn being dismissive of Trump during his 2016 campaign and before his 2024 campaign and to his dismissal of Trump's claims of widespread election fraud after he lost to Biden in 2020. Those claims by Trump were debunked.
Cornyn was even skeptical early on about the border wall he took credit for helping finance, calling Trump “naive” in proposing it before he sealed the 2016 Republican presidential nomination. Paxton has pointed to that comment, portraying Cornyn as “opposing the border wall.”
The episodes certainly weren't helpful for Cornyn, who has worked to show Texas Republicans where he and Trump agree.
Cornyn aired ads featuring him with Border Patrol agents along the wall, promoting his support to secure $11 billion for Texans' work on it. Another ad promoted Cornyn's 99% support for Trump's agenda, including his three U.S. Supreme Court nominees.
But the disagreements are small compared with the broader shift Cornyn has resisted.
Vinny Minchillo, a veteran Republican consultant in the Dallas area, referred to Cornyn as “an old George W. Bush Republican, which is now a bad thing” since Trump’s rise.
Cornyn was elected attorney general in 1998, winning when a new national conservative figure was rising out of Texas, the newly reelected Gov. George W. Bush, who was elected president two years later.
The Bush name, once a three-generation fixture in Texas politics, quietly disappeared when then-Texas Land Commissioner George P. Bush, grandson and nephew of two presidents, lost his challenge of Paxton for attorney general in 2022.
“I think there is certainly some level of John Cornyn fatigue,” Minchillo said. “He’s been on the ballot in Texas for a long, long time.”
As of last week, Trump had endorsed dozens of Republican lawmakers in Texas. But he is not expected to endorse ahead of the Senate primary, according to people familiar with the White House thinking but who were not authorized to speak publicly.
That would leave Cornyn among only three incumbent Republican senators seeking reelection who have not received Trump's public backing, with Maine's Susan Collins and Louisiana's Bill Cassidy.
Cornyn acknowledged he's “not somebody who cries out for attention at every opportunity.”
Instead, in the final weeks of the primary campaign, he's hoping voters consider which candidate would be the most effective at getting things done — because he believes they'll support him if they do.
“Sometimes people make the distinction between a workhorse and a show horse,” he said. “And I’m happy to be a workhorse.”
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Beaumont reported from Des Moines, Iowa. Hanna reported from Topeka, Kan. Maya Sweedler contributed from Washington.
Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, walks through the Capitol, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Allison Robbert)
FILE - Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, introduces Brooke Rollins during a Senate Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee hearing on her nomination for Secretary of Agriculture, Jan. 23, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)