COLORADO ROCKIES SUPPLEMENTAL BIOS #30 RYAN HANIGAN C #21 JONATHAN LUCROY C #37 PAT NESHEK RHP #60 ZAC ROSSCUP LHP

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COLORADO ROCKIES SUPPLEMENTAL BIOS #30 RYAN HANIGAN C #21 JONATHAN LUCROY C #37 PAT NESHEK RHP #60 ZAC ROSSCUP LHP

ryan HANIGAN Catcher Ht: 6-0 Wt: 225 B/T: R/R Opening Day Age: 36 Born: Aug. 16, 1980 in Washington, D.C. Major League Service: 8.077 Contract: Through 2017 Obtained: Signed as Minor League free agent, March 28, 2017 CAREER HIGHLIGHTS Signed to a Minor League contract by Colorado on March 28, 2017. Owns a career.996 fielding percentage, the best among active catchers with at least 500 games behind the plate. His 3.70 catcher s ERA is the sixth-best among active catchers with at least 500 games played. Owns a career 307-234 record in 541 starts at catcher. Has caught two no-hitters, both thrown by Reds right-hander Homer Bailey: Sept. 28, 2012 and July 2, 2013. HANIGAN 2016: Batted.171 (18-for-105) in 35 games in his second season with Boston. The Red Sox went 21-9 in his 30 starts, including 19-4 from April 22-Aug. 4 Boston won eight consecutive games in which Hanigan was the starter from June 4-Aug. 4 Missed 52 team games due to two stints on the disabled list was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a neck strain from June 5-July 4 was placed on the 15-day disabled list for a second time with left ankle peroneal tendinitis from Aug. 6-Sept. 1. Threw out 28% (7-25) of attempted base stealers. Had a season-high four RBI May 15 vs. Houston. 2015: Appeared in 54 games in his first season with the Red Sox, batting.247 (43-for-174) with a.337 on-base percentage. Made his third career Opening Day start. Earned the 2015 Unsung Hero Award from the Boston chapter of the BBWAA. Threw out 27% (9-33) of attempted base stealers. Ranked fifth among all American League catchers in on-base percentage (min. 50 games). Placed on the 15-day disabled list on May 2 with a fractured right hand underwent surgery to fix a metacarpal fracture transferred to the 60-day disabled list on May 3 and was reinstated on July 2. Hit.310 (31-for-100) with a.389 on-base percentage in 30 games at Fenway Park. 2014: Appeared in 84 games in his only season with Tampa Bay. The Rays went 33-33 in his 66 starts and 44-52 otherwise 11 of his 66 starts resulted in shutout wins. Hit five home runs, one short of his career high (six with Cincinnati in 2011). Tied his career high with an eight-game hitting streak from July 21-Aug. 6. Had two disabled list stints, May 27-June 10 (right hamstring tightness) and July 9-Aug. 25 (left oblique strain). On Sept. 12 at Toronto, became the first catcher in Tampa Bay history to catch a shutout and hit a home run in a 1-0 win. Traded twice on Dec. 19, first from Tampa Bay to San Diego in a three-team deal with Washington, then from San Diego to Boston. 2013: Appeared in 75 games with 66 starts in his last season with Cincinnati. Made his second straight Opening Day start with the Reds. Threw out 40% (12-30) of attempted base stealers, third-best among Major League catchers (minimum 50 games). Caught Homer Bailey s no-hitter on July 2 vs. San Francisco. Had two DL-stints, April 20-May 9 (strained left oblique) and July 10-Aug. 8 (sprained left wrist). Was the starting catcher in Cincinnati s 6-2 Wild Card loss, Oct. 1 at Pittsburgh. 2012: Established career highs in games (112), hits (87), doubles (14) and walks (44). Made his first career Opening Day start. Recorded a 3.04 catcher s ERA in his starts, the lowest by any catcher since 2003 (Paul Lo Duca, Los Angeles Dodgers, 2.73). ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR 141

(HANIGAN, continued) In his 98 starts, Cincinnati went 61-37 (.622) caught 11 of Cincinnati s 12 shutouts and six of the team s nine complete games. Threw out 43% (26-60) attempted base stealers, second-best in MLB. Started four of five games in the NLDS vs. San Francisco batted.200 (3-for-15) with three RBI. 2011: Batted.267 (71-for-266) with a career-high six home runs in 91 games with Cincinnati. Recorded two multi-home run games, April 3 vs. Milwaukee and Aug. 13 vs. San Diego. From Aug. 13-19, went 8-for-12, becoming the first Cincinnati catcher with at least eight hits and eight RBI over a three-game stretch since Johnny Bench in 1972. Suffered a season-ending back injury, which sidelined him after Sept. 15. HANIGAN 2010: Established career highs in batting average (.300) and RBI (40) as the back-up catcher for the Central Division champion Reds. Cincinnati went 38-20 in his 58 starts and Reds pitchers posted a 3.36 ERA while he caught. Was on the disabled list from May 29-July 8 with a broken left thumb. Appeared in two games in the Division Series vs. Philadelphia, going 0-for-4. 2009: Appeared in 90 games for the Reds in his first full season, making a club-high 72 starts at catcher. Became the club s starting catcher after Ramon Hernandez went on the disabled list on July 20. Threw out 40% (19-47) of attempted base stealers, best among all qualifying Major League catchers. Led National League catchers with a.998 fielding percentage. Missed 15 games with a concussion from Aug. 25-Sept. 8. 2008: Spent the majority of the season with the Triple-A Louisville, where he was a Midseason and Postseason International League All-Star. Was rated the best defensive catcher in the International League by Baseball America. Hit.324 (88-for-272) in 75 games for Louisville prior to his promotion to Cincinnati on Aug. 10. Started behind the plate in 25 of the Reds last 44 games with the team going 14-11 in those starts. 2007: Made his Major League debut on Sept. 9 after spending time with Double-A Chattanooga and Triple-A Louisville. Appeared in five games for the Reds, including two starts, going 3-for-10 with one double and two RBI. Made his Major League debut as a pinch-hitter on Sept. 9 vs. Milwaukee, doubling off of Ben Sheets on the first pitch he saw. In 101 Minor League games, hit a combined.281 (91-for-324) with 19 doubles, four home runs and 36 RBI. Was named a Southern League Midseason All-Star while with Chattanooga. 2006: Played a majority of the season with Double-A Chattanooga. Was a non-roster invitee to the Reds Major League Spring Training camp for the first time in his career. Hit.246 (31-for-126) in 56 games with Chattanooga. Was promoted to Triple-A Louisville on May 24 before being sent back to Chattanooga on June 5 promoted again on Aug. 2 before being transferred to Chattanooga on Aug. 8 for the remainder of the season. 2005: Batted.321 (107-for-333) in 100 games for Double-A Chattanooga. Ranked second in the Southern League in batting average and third in on-base percentage (.418). Played 47 games at first base and 46 at catcher. 2004: Appeared in 119 games with High-A Potomac, his most games in any professional season. Ranked fifth among all Reds Minor Leaguers and seventh in the Carolina League with a.296 batting average. His 22-game hit streak form July 6-29 was the longest in the Carolina League in 2004. 2003: Selected to play in the Midwest League All-Star Game in his first full professional season. Spent a majority of the season with Low-A Dayton, batting.277 (86-for-311) with a.373 on-base percentage. Appeared in one game for Triple-A Louisville, going 1-for-3. 2002: Appeared in six games for Low-A Dayton after signing with the Reds as a non-drafted free agent on Aug. 23. PERSONAL: Ryan Michael Hanigan native of Washington D.C., but grew up in Andover, Mass. his father, Mike, was an FBI agent in Boston attended Rollins College in Florida where he batted.358 in three seasons and led the team to a berth in the NCAA Division II playoffs his junior season played in the Cape Cod Baseball League in 2002 before signing with the Reds in late August batted.292 with eight RBI in 37 games for Orleans. 142 ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR

(HANIGAN, continued) HANIGAN S CAREER RECORD Year Team AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SAC SF HBP BB IBB SO SB CS GIDP OBP SLG 2002 Dayton.273 6 11 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0.333.364 2003 Dayton.277 92 311 43 86 12 0 1 31 1 3 4 40 1 44 3 4 8.363.325 Louisville.333 1 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0.500.333 2004 Potomac.296 119 429 58 127 21 0 5 56 5 9 6 49 1 51 6 5 12.369.380 2005 Chattanooga.321 100 333 45 107 14 1 4 29 2 0 5 50 1 41 4 1 8.418.405 2006 Chattanooga.246 56 126 17 31 2 0 0 14 0 3 2 19 0 23 0 0 1.347.262 Louisville.154 8 13 2 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 6 0 2 0 0 0.421.154 2007 Chattanooga.299 60 197 30 59 14 1 3 27 2 4 3 41 2 30 0 2 4.420.426 Louisville.252 41 127 16 32 5 0 1 9 6 1 2 14 2 15 0 0 3.333.315 CINCINNATI.300 5 10 3 3 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0.364.400 2008 Louisville.324 74 272 37 88 14 0 4 35 2 4 8 25 0 39 1 0 9.392.419 CINCINNATI.271 31 85 9 23 2 9 2 8 0 0 3 10 1 9 0 0 2.367.365 2009 Louisville.389 5 18 4 7 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0.421.500 CINCINNATI.263 90 251 22 66 6 1 3 11 2 1 2 37 7 31 0 0 9.361.331 2010 CINCINNATI.300 70 203 25 61 11 0 5 40 1 2 4 33 4 21 0 0 6.405.429 Louisville.239 13 46 6 11 3 0 0 2 0 0 2 4 0 6 0 0 1.327.304 2011 CINCINNATI.267 91 266 27 71 6 0 6 31 1 0 2 35 3 32 0 0 3.356.357 2012 CINCINNATI.274 112 317 25 87 14 0 2 24 4 3 3 44 13 37 0 0 6.365.338 2013 CINCINNATI.198 75 222 17 44 8 0 2 21 2 1 6 29 9 27 0 1 7.306.261 Louisville.375 3 8 2 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0.444.375 2014 TAMPA BAY.218 84 225 18 49 9 0 5 34 2 2 3 31 0 39 1 0 6.318.324 Charlotte.250 6 20 4 5 0 0 1 2 0 0 2 2 0 3 0 0 1.375.400 2015 BOSTON.247 54 174 28 43 8 0 2 16 1 1 4 20 0 39 0 0 6.337.328 Pawtucket.182 4 11 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 1.357.182 Portland.250 3 8 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 1.455.375 2016 BOSTON.171 35 105 9 18 4 0 1 14 0 0 1 7 0 27 0 0 5.230.238 Pawtucket.200 8 25 2 5 1 0 0 3 0 1 2 3 0 7 0 0 0.323.240 Portland.333 2 6 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0.500.33 Lowell.500 2 8 3 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0.600.500 Minor League Totals.293 604 1972 273 577 90 2 19 217 19 25 37 266 7 269 14 12 49.383.369 Major League Totals.250 647 1858 183 465 69 1 28 202 13 10 28 247 38 264 1 1 50.345.334 HANIGAN HANIGAN S CAREER FIELDING POS PCT G-GS PO A E TC DP C..996 626-541 4201 277 19 4497 39 HANIGAN S POSTSEASON CAREER RECORD Year Series Team Opp AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO 2010 NLDS CIN PHI.000 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2012 NLDS CIN SF.200 4 15 3 3 0 0 0 3 0 3 2013 NLWC CIN PIT.000 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Postseason Totals.136 7 22 3 3 0 0 0 3 0 3 HANIGAN S CAREER TRANSACTIONS 2002: Signed by the Cincinnati Reds as a non-drafted free agent, Aug. 23. 2009: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (concussion), Aug. 24; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Louisville), Sept. 3; reinstated, Sept. 9. 2010: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (broken left thumb), May 20; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Louisville), June 24; reinstated July 9. 2011: Signed to a three-year contract by Cincinnati through the 2013 season. 2013: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (strained left oblique), April 21; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Louisville), May 7; reinstated May 10 placed on the 15-day disabled list (sprained left wrist), July 11; reinstated, Aug. 9 acquired by the Tampa Bay Rays as part of a three-team, five-player trade along with RHP Heath Bell and cash considerations from the Arizona Diamondbacks in exchange for RHP Jason Choate and a player to be named later. 2014: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (strained right hamstring), May 28; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Charlotte), June 7; reinstated, June 11 placed on the 15-day disabled list (oblique strain); sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Charlotte), Aug. 2; reinstated, Aug. 26 acquired by the San Diego Padres as part of a three-team, 10-player trade along with OF Wil Myers, LHP Jose Castillo and RHP Gerardo Reyes in exchange for C Rene Rivera, RHP Burch Smith and INF Jake Bauers, Dec. 19 acquired by the Boston Red Sox in exchange for 3B Will Middlebrooks, Dec. 19. 2015: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (fractured knuckle, right hand), May 2; transferred to the 60-day disabled list, May 3; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Pawtucket), June 22, reinstated, July 2. 2016: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (neck strain), June 5; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Pawtucket), June 23; reinstated, July 5 placed on the 15-day disabled list (left ankle peroneal tendinitis), Aug. 6; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Portland), Aug. 27; reinstated, Sept. 2. 2017: Signed by Philadelphia to a Minor League contract, Jan. 25 released by Philadelphia, March 7 signed by Colorado to a Minor League contract, March 28. ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR 143

jonathan lucroy Catcher Ht: 6-0 Wt: 200 B/T: R/R Opening Day Age: 31 Born: June 13, 1986 in Eustis, Fla. Major League Service: 6.136 Contract: Through 2017 Obtained: Acquired via trade from Texas on July 30, 2017 CAREER HIGHLIGHTS Acquired by Colorado from Texas in exchange for a player to be named later, July 30, 2017 Was acquired by Texas from Milwaukee on Aug. 1, 2016 overall with the Brewers and Rangers in 2016, set a career high with 24 home runs and had the most caught stealings (40) of any Major League catcher since 2009. Is a two-time National League All-Star (2014, 2016) is 3-for-3 in three career All-Star Game plate appearances, joining four others to hit safely in each of three-plus career at-bats: Vince DiMaggio, Willie Davis, Tim McCarver and Jimmie Rollins. Led the Majors with 53 doubles in 2014, the first time a player appearing primarily at catcher had led his league in doubles in modern MLB history (since 1900). Made his Major League debut with the Brewers in 2010 after being selected by Milwaukee in the third round of the 2007 First-Year Player Draft. LUCROY 2016: Combined to hit.292 (143-for-490) with a career-high 24 home runs in 142 games with the Brewers and Rangers. Was a manager s selection to the National League All-Star team caught the final two innings and singled off Andrew Miller in his only plate appearance. Along with the career-high home runs, established his second-highest totals in RBI (81), OPS (.855), batting average, total bases (245), extra-base hits (51), walks (47) and runs (67). Was acquired by the Rangers from the Brewers, along with RHP Jeremy Jeffress on Aug. 1 in exchange for OF Lewis Brinson, RHP Luis Ortiz and OF Ryan Cordell. His 24 home runs, all as catcher, were second-most among all Major League catchers (Grandal, 27) had six home runs in his first 10 games as a Ranger, most by any player in Washington/Texas franchise history. Started all three games of the ALDS against Toronto and went 1-for-12 was hitless in his first 10 at-bats before a sixth-inning single in Game 3. 2015: In his final full season with the Brewers, batted.264 (98-for-371) in 103 games played. Was on the disabled list from April 21-May 28 with a fractured left great toe sustained from a Zack Cozart foul tip on April 20 missed 38 games. Missed 14 games from Sept. 9-23 with a concussion suffered on a foul tip off his mask, Sept. 8 at Miami. Career-high 11-game hit streak from Aug. 21-Sept. 3. Threw out 24 of 04 runners attempting to steal (25.5%). 2014: Let the Majors with 53 doubles, becoming the first primary catcher in MLB history (since 1900) to lead his league in that category. Recorded a Major League record 46 doubles while player catcher, breaking Ivan Rodriguez mark of 45 set in 1996 tied the Brewers franchise single-season record in doubles (Lyle Overbay, 2004). Also ranked among National League leaders in multi-hit games (3rd, 53), extra-base hits (T3rd, 68), hits (T5th, 176), batting average (7th,.301), on-base percentage (8th,.373) and OPS (10th,.837) also set career hights in games (153), at bats (585), runs (73) and walks (66). Finished fourth in National League MVP voting and was named the Brewers MVP by the Milwaukee BBWAA chapter. Was named a National League All-Star and started the game due to an injury to elected starter Yadier Molina went 2-for-2 with RBI doubles off of Jon Lester and Chris Sale. ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR 141

LUCROY, continued) 2013: Set career-highs in triples (six), RBI (82) and stolen bases (nine) in 147 games with Milwaukee. Recorded 76 RBI as a catcher, tied for the Major League lead with Yadier Molina and Matt Wieters. Batted.303 with 15 home runs and 65 RBI over his last 111 games to raise his final average from.208 to.280. Recorded a career-high five hits, May 31 at Philadelphia. Played for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic, appearing in three games and going 2-for-5 with two runs, one RBI and one walk. 2012: Appeared in 96 games due to a fractured right hand that sidelined him from May 28-July 25. Batted.289 (37-for-95) with runners in scoring position, including a Major League-best.514 (18-for-35) prior to his DL stint. Tied the Milwaukee club record with a pair of seven RBI games, May 20 vs. Minnesota and Aug. 30 at Chicago- NL, hitting a grand slam in each contest is the only catcher in MLB history with two seven-rbi games in one season and became only the fifth catcher in MLB history with two different seven-rbi games in a career (Bill Dickey, Smoky Burgess, Johnny Bench, Ramon Hernandez). LCURY 2011:In his first full Major League season, made 114 starts at catcher. Opened the season on the disabled list placed on the 15-day DL on March 30, retroactive to March 22, with a fractured right pinkie finger reinstated April 11. Batted.265 (114-for-430) overall with 16 doubles, one triple and 12 home runs. First career walk-off hit with suicide squeeze in ninth inning on May 28 vs. San Francisco. Appeared in 10 games in the postseason with nine starts and batted.250 (8-for-32) with one home run and five RBI homered off Edwin Jackson in Game 6 loss to St. Louis in the deciding game of the NLCS. 2010: Made his Major League debut on May 21 at Minnesota and went on to start 74 games at catcher for the Brewers. Opened the season with Double-A Huntsville where he hit.452 in 10 games promoted to Triple-A Nashville on April 20 and appeared in 21 games before his contract was selected by Milwaukee on May 21. Made his Major League debut on May 21 at Minnesota and had a pinch-hit single off Nick Blackburn in his first plate appearance. Hit his first Major League home run off Ryan Rowland-Smith on June 25 vs. Seattle. 2009: Spent the season with Double-A Huntsville where he was named a Southern League All-Star. Was first on the club in RBI (66), doubles (32) and walks (78). Following the season, played for the Peoria Javelinas in the Arizona Fall League where he batted.310 with two home runs and 10 RBI in 17 games. 2008: Combined for a.301 average with 20 home runs and 77 RBI in 129 games between Low-A West Virginia and High-A Brevard County. Was named a South Atlantic League All-Star at West Virginia where he batted.310 (74-for-239) with 16 doubles and 10 home runs in 65 games. 2007: Appeared in 61 games for Rookie Level Helena in his first professional season and was named a Pioneer League Post-Season All-Star. A Rookie All-Star and rated as the sixth-best prospect in the Pioneer League by Baseball America. Made his professional debut on June 19 at Missoula and went 0-for-3 with a walk as the starting catcher. PERSONAL: Jonathan Charles Lucroy he and wife Sarah have a daughter, Ellia played three seasons at the University of Louisiana-Lafayette, setting career school records with 54 doubles, 184 RBI and 414 total bases while ranking second with 241 hits was a Louisville Slugger Fresman All-American in 2005 and a first team All-Sun Belt Conference selection in 2005 and 2007 graduated from Umatilla High School in Florida in 2004 had his uniform number 6 retired by the school in April 2011 enjoys hunting and fishing his brother, David, was selected as a RHP by Milwaukee in the 20th round of the 2015 MLB First-Year Player Draft David pitched for Brevard County and Wisconsin (Low-A) in 2016 was selected as the recipient of the Brewers Good Guy Award by the Milwaukee BBWAA from 2013-15 and won Milwaukee s MLBPAA Heart and Hustle Award from 2014-16 was the club s nominee for the Robert Clemente Award in 2013 donated $10,000 in 2014 to the Open arms Home, whose mission is to provide a loving residential environment that serves the emotional, physical and developmental needs of orphaned, abandoned and disadvantaged children in the Easter Cape of South Africa in January 2014, was the personal guest of Senator Ron Johnson at President Barack Obama s State of the Union Address supported Fisher House Wisconsin, a facility for military veterans and their families receiving treatment at Milwaukee VA Hospital with Brewers, provided tickets to military families from 2011-13, provided $5,000 scholarships to military families is active with the Make-A-Wish Foundation, granting wishes and visiting hospitals served as a spokesperson for the Muscular Dystrophy Association Team Muscle Walk and Brewers Community Foundation Drive for Charity in 2014-15 is a supporter of Miracle League, which allows all children to play organized baseball regardless of ability. 142 ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR

(LUCROY, continued) LUCROY S CAREER RECORD Year Team AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SAC SF HBP BB IBB SO SB CS GIDP OBP SLG 2007 Helena.342 61 234 35 80 18 2 4 39 0 2 1 16 0 37 0 3 8.383.487 2008 West Virginia.310 65 239 45 74 16 1 10 33 0 2 3 30 1 39 8 1 2.391.510 Brevard County.292 64 236 31 69 12 1 10 44 0 6 2 28 0 45 1 2 5.364.479 2009 Hunstville.267 125 419 61 112 32 2 9 66 1 6 2 78 1 66 1 1 14.380.418 2010 Hunstville.452 10 42 8 19 3 0 0 5 1 0 0 4 0 3 0 0 0.500.524 Nashville.238 21 80 8 19 4 0 2 11 0 0 0 3 0 14 0 0 4.265.363 MILWAUKEE.253 75 277 24 70 9 0 4 26 0 1 1 18 1 44 4 2 9.300.329 2011 Hunstville.273 4 11 3 3 1 0 0 4 0 0 0 6 0 1 1 0 0.529.364 MILWAUKEE.265 136 430 45 114 16 1 12 59 4 3 2 29 0 99 2 1 7.313.391 2012 Wisconsin.333 4 12 0 4 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2.385.417 Nashville.429 2 7 4 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0.500.429 MILWAUKEE.320 96 316 46 101 17 4 12 58 1 3 4 22 1 44 4 1 12.368.513 2013 MILWAUKEE.280 147 521 59 146 25 6 18 82 0 8 5 46 2 69 9 1 16.340.455 2014 MILWAUKEE.301 153 585 73 176 53 2 13 69 0 2 2 66 3 71 4 4 13.373.465 2015 Brevard County.250 4 16 3 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0.333.250 MILWAUKEE.264 103 371 51 98 20 3 7 43 1 6 1 36 0 64 1 0 18.326.391 2016 MILWAUKEE.299 95 338 48 101 17 3 13 50 0 4 1 33 3 70 5 0 12.359.482 TEXAS.276 47 152 19 42 7 0 11 31 0 0 2 14 2 30 0 0 4.345.539 Minor League Totals.299 360 1296 198 387 87 6 35 206 2 16 9 168 2 206 13 7 35.379.456 Major League Totals.284 852 2990 365 848 164 19 90 418 6 27 18 264 12 491 29 9 91.343.441 LUCROY S CAREER FIELDING POS PCT G-GS PO A E TC DP C..993 835-795 6171 423 46 6640 46 1B.990 47-35 269 14 3 286 23 LUCROY S POSTSEASON CAREER RECORD Year Series Team Opp AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO 2011 NLDS MIL ARI.200 4 15 1 3 0 0 0 2 0 5 2011 NLCS MIL STL.294 6 17 2 5 1 0 1 3 0 3 2016 ALDS TEX TOR.083 3 12 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 Postseason Totals.205 13 44 4 9 1 0 1 5 0 10 LUCROY S WORLD BASEBALL CLASSIC CAREER RECORD Year Team AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO 2017 USA.267 4 15 1 4 0 0 0 1 0 3 LUCROY S CAREER TRANSACTIONS 2007: Selected by the Milwaukee Brewers in the third round of the First-Year Player Draft. 2011: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (fractured right pinkie), March 30; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Huntsville), April 7; reinstated, April 11. 2012: Signed five-year extension with Milwaukee, March 27 placed on the 15-day disabled list (fractured right hand), May 29; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (July 19); reinstated, July 26. 2015: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (broken left toe), April 21; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Brevard County), May 28, reinstated, June 1. 2016: Acquired by the Texas Rangers from the Milwaukee Brewers, along with RHP Jeremy Jeffress, in exchange for OF Lewis Brinson, RHP Luis Ortiz and OF Ryan Cordell, Aug. 1 2017: Acquired by the Colorado Rockies from the Texas Rangers in exchange for a player to be named later, July 30. ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR 143

pat neshek Right-Handed Pitcher Ht: 6-3 Wt: 221 B/T: S/L Opening Day Age: 36 Born: Sept. 4, 1980 in Madison, Wisc. Major League Service: 8.159 Contract: Through 2017 Obtained: Acquired via trade from Philadelphia on July 26, 2017 CAREER HIGHLIGHTS Acquired by Colorado from Philadelphia along with cash considerations in exchange for three Minor Leaguers: INF Jose Gomez, RHP J.D. Hammer and RHP Alejandro Requena on July 26, 2017. Named a 2017 National League All-Star, the Phillies lone representative, after going 2-2 with a 1.27 ERA (35.1 IP, 5 ER) prior to the break. Named an All-Star in 2014 as a member of the St. Louis Cardinals. Originally drafted by the Minnesota Twins in the sixth round of the 2002 First-Year Player Draft. NESHEK 2016: Made 60 appearances with the Houston Astros, going 2-2 with a 3.06 ERA (47.0 IP, 16 ER). Traded to the Philadelphia Phillies on Nov. 4, 2016 for cash considerations. Held opposing hitters to a.194 batting average (33-for-170). Reached 60 appearances for the third consecutive season held opponents scoreless in 50 of those appearances did not allow more than two earned runs until his final game of the season (three runs). Had a 5.14 ERA in April (7.0 IP, 4 ER) before posting a 2.70 ERA (40.0 IP, 12 ER) and a 0.95 WHIP over his final 50 appearances of the season. Recorded his 400th career appearance on July 19 at Oakland. 2015: Went 3-6 with a 3.62 ERA (54.2 IP, 22 ER) across 66 appearances in his first season with Houston. Began the season with a 24-game walk-less streak, the second-longest streak to begin a season in MLB history (Mark Eichhorn, 30 games, 1991). Ranked fifth among AL relievers in inherited runners scored percentage (4-27, 14.8%). Did not allow a run in 17 consecutive appearances (14.0 IP) from April 27-May 7. Committed the first error of his career, Sept. 2 vs. Seattle, snapping a streak of 353 straight games without one. Made two scoreless appearances in the ALDS, allowing two hits with two appearances in one inning pitched. 2014: Named to his first career All-Star team in his lone season with St. Louis. Made 71 appearances, his most since 2007 went 7-2 with a career high six saves and a 1.87 ERA (67.1 IP, 14 ER) scoreless in 62 of 71 appearances. Struck out 68 batters with only nine walks finished first among all NL relievers in SO/BB ratio (7.56), second in WHIP (0.79), tied for fifth in wins, seventh in ERA and eighth in opponent batting average (.183) Was a non-roster invite to Spring Training after signing a Minor League contract Feb. 2, 2014. Posted a career-best 20.1-inning scoreless streak April 11-May 31 allowed two earned runs over a 49-game span, April 11-Aug. 13 (46.0 IP, 0.39 ERA). Earned his first career save, June 4 at Kansas City. Went 4-0 with two saves and a 0.70 ERA (38.1 IP, 3 ER) in 43 game prior to the All-Star break. Appeared in eight postseason games, four in the NLDS against Los Angeles-NL and four in the NLCS against San Francisco went 0-1 with a 2.35 ERA (7.2 IP, 2 ER), three hits, no walks and six strikeouts scored on in two of eight appearances. 2013: Made 45 appearances in his second season with Oakland, going 2-1 with a 3.35 ERA (40.1 IP, 15 ER). Scoreless in 35 of 45 appearances did not allow an earned run in 21 of 24 appearances from April 13-June 25 (23.0 IP, 3 ER), 1.17 ERA). Also appeared in two games with Triple-A Sacramento, Aug. 31 and Sept. 2. 2012: Signed by the Orioles to a Minor League contract Jan. 30 traded to the Athletics Aug. 3. Made 35 appearances with Triple-A Norfolk in the Baltimore organization, going 3-2 with a 2.66 ERA (44.0 IP, 13 ER) prior to be traded to Oakland on Aug. 3. ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR 141

(NESHEK, continued) Went 2-1 with a 1.37 ERA (19.2 IP, 3 ER) and a.147 opponents batting average in 24 appearances with Oakland. Made one appearance in the ALDS in Game One at Detroit did not allow a baserunner in 0.2 innings. 2011:Went 1-1 with a 4.01 ERA (24.2 IP, 11 ER) in 25 appearances with San Diego. Claimed off of waivers by San Diego from Minnesota on March 20 and made the Padres Opening Day roster. Earned the win on Opening Day, March 31 at St. Louis, his first win since Aug. 15, 2007 at Seattle went 1-0 with a 2.16 ERA over his first 16 games since March 31-June 10. 2010: Went 0-1 with a 5.00 ERA (9.0 IP, 5 ER) in 11 appearances in his last season with Minnesota. Began the season with the Twins and did not allow a run over his first five appearances. Placed on the 15-day disabled list with inflammation in his right middle finger on April 29 reinstated June 5 and optioned to Triple-A Rochester went 5-1 with a 3.89 ERA (39.1 IP, 17 ER) in 30 appearances with Rochester. NESHEK 2009: Missed the entire season while recovering from Tommy John surgery. 2008: Made 15 appearances with Minnesota before missing the rest of the season with an acute partial tear of the UCL in his right elbow. Went 0-1 with a 4.73 ERA (13.1 IP, 7 ER) prior to being placed on the 15-day disabled list May 9. 2007: Made his first career Opening Day roster and spent the entire season with Minnesota. Recorded career highs in wins (seven), appearances (74), innings pitched (70.1 IP) and strikeouts (74) went 7-2 with a 2.94 ERA (70.1 IP, 23 ER). Was one of five players on the Final Vote Ballot for the 2007 American League All-Star team. Finished tied for second among all AL relievers in wins, fifth in opponent average (.183), tied for fifth in appearances and tied for ninth in strikeouts. 2006: Began the season with Rochester before making his Major League debut July 7 and spending the rest of the season with Minnesota. Made his Major League debut July 7 and pitched two scoreless innings at Texas with two strikeouts. Did not allow a run over his first five Major League appearances first Major League win on July 30 at Detroit. Made two appearances in the ALDS vs. Oakland allowed one run on one hit in one inning pitched. Was named a Midseason and Postseason All-Star in the International League where he went 6-2 with a 1.95 ERA (60.0 IP, 13 ER) named the best reliever in the IL and a Triple-A All-Star by Baseball America. 2005: Spent the entire season with Double-A New Britain where he went 6-4 with a 2.19 ERA (82.1 IP, 20 ER) with 21 walks and 95 strikeouts. Made the fifth-most appearances in the Easter League (55) average 10.4 SO/9.0 IP. 2004: Split the season between Double-A New Britain and High-A Fort Myers, going 2-2 with a 3.52 ERA (53.2 IP, 21 ER). Began the season with New Britain before being transferred to Fort Myers on July 15. 2003: Went 8-4 with 17 saves and a 1.77 ERA (71.1 IP, 14 ER) across three levels. Started the season with Low-A Quad Cities where he was named a Midwest League Midseason All-Star after posting a 0.52 ERA (34.1 IP, 2 ER) in 28 appearances. Promoted to Fort Myers on June 23 and to New Britain on Aug. 12 pitched for Grand Canyon in the Arizona Fall League. 2002: Made 23 appearances for Rookie Level Elizabethton in his first professional season. Went 0-2 with a 0.99 ERA (27.1 IP, 3 ER) in 23 appearances tied for second in the league with 15 saves. PERSONAL: Patrick Neshek KNEE-shack married to Stephanee; has a son, Hoyt and two daughters, Shae and Skye 1999 graduate of Park Center High School in Maryland where he was named All-State as a senior developed his sidearm delivery after an injury in high school attended Butler University where he set the single-game strikeout record (18 vs. Detroit, April 15, 2001), single-season strikeout record (118, 2001) and career strikeout record (280) named a 2001 Cape Cod League All-Star with Wareham collects baseball cards and sports memorabilia, which he chronicles on his website (eteamz.com/patneshek). NESHEK S WORLD BASEBALL CLASSIC CAREER RECORD Year Team W L SV SVO G GS IP H R ER HR BB SO ERA 2017 USA 1 0 0 0 5 0 5.0 4 0 0 0 1 4 0.00 142 ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR

NESHEK S CAREER RECORD Year Team W L ERA G GS CG SHO GF SV IP H R ER HR HB BB IBB SO WP BK 2002 Elizabethton 0 2 0.99 23 0 0 0 22 15 27.1 13 6 3 0 2 6 0 41 1 0 2003 Quad City 3 2 0.52 28 0 0 0 24 14 34.1 20 3 2 0 1 11 2 53 1 0 Fort Myers 4 1 2.15 20 0 0 0 15 2 29.1 22 8 7 2 1 6 1 29 0 1 New Britain 1 1 5.87 5 1 0 0 2 1 7.2 7 5 5 2 1 3 0 5 0 0 2004 Fort Myers 0 1 2.95 16 0 0 0 15 10 18.1 16 7 6 2 0 2 0 19 0 0 New Britain 2 1 3.82 26 0 0 0 15 2 35.1 24 15 15 2 1 18 5 38 1 0 2005 New Britain 6 4 2.19 55 0 0 0 48 24 82.1 69 25 20 9 2 21 3 95 3 0 2006 Rochester 6 2 1.95 33 0 0 0 23 14 60.0 41 13 13 7 1 14 4 87 2 0 Minnesota 4 2 2.19 32 0 0 0 3 0 37.0 23 9 9 6 0 6 0 53 0 0 2007 Minnesota 7 2 2.94 74 0 0 0 20 0 70.1 44 25 23 7 2 27 5 74 2 0 2008 Minnesota 0 1 4.73 15 0 0 0 3 0 13.1 12 7 7 2 0 4 1 15 0 0 2009 Did Not Pitch - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2010 Fort Myers 0 0 13.50 2 0 0 0 0 0 2.0 3 3 3 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 Rochester 5 1 3.89 30 0 0 0 9 1 39.1 40 21 17 4 3 13 6 25 0 0 Minnesota 0 1 5.00 11 0 0 0 3 0 9.0 7 5 5 1 1 8 0 9 0 0 2011 San Diego 1 1 4.01 25 0 0 0 13 0 24.2 19 12 11 4 1 22 1 20 1 0 Tucson 1 2 4.10 24 0 0 0 7 3 26.1 29 12 12 5 0 10 1 13 0 0 2012 Norfolk 3 2 2.66 25 0 0 0 23 11 44.0 42 13 13 1 1 7 1 49 2 0 Oakland 2 1 1.37 24 0 0 0 5 0 19.2 10 3 3 3 1 6 1 16 1 0 2013 Sacramento 0 0 0.00 2 0 0 0 1 0 2.0 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 Oakland 2 1 3.35 45 0 0 0 17 0 40.1 40 17 15 6 0 15 2 29 1 0 2014 St. Louis 7 2 1.87 71 0 0 0 17 6 67.1 44 14 14 4 2 9 2 68 1 0 2015 Houston 3 6 3.62 66 0 0 0 8 1 54.2 49 25 22 8 2 12 1 51 1 0 2016 Houston 2 2 3.06 60 0 0 0 9 0 47.0 33 17 16 6 0 11 7 43 1 0 Minor League Totals 31 19 2.56 299 1 0 0 204 97 408.1 338 133 116 35 13 113 23 458 10 1 Major League Totals 28 19 2.93 423 0 0 0 98 7 383.1 281 134 125 47 9 120 20 378 8 0 NESHEK S CAREER POSTSEASON RECORD Year Series Team Opp W L SV SVO G GS CG IP H R ER HR BB SO ERA 2006 ALDS MIN OAK 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 1.0 1 1 1 0 0 1 9.00 2012 ALDS OAK DET 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0.2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0.00 2014 NLDS STL LAD 0 1 0 0 4 0 0 3.2 2 1 1 1 0 3 2.45 NLCS STL SF 0 0 0 1 4 0 0 4.0 1 1 1 1 0 3 2.25 2015 ALDS HOU KC 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1.0 2 0 0 0 0 2 0.00 Playoff Totals 0 2 0 1 13 0 0 10.1 6 3 3 2 0 10 2.61 NESHEK S CAREER TRANSACTIONS 2002: Selected by Minnesota in the sixth round of the First-Year Player Draft. 2008: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (partial tear, right UCL), May 9 transferred to 60-day disabled list, May 29; reinstated from the 60-day disabled list, Oct. 24. 2009: Placed on the 60-day disabled list (recovery from right elbow surgery), Feb. 21; reinstated from the 60-day disabled list, Nov. 10. 2010: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (inflamed right middle finger), May 2; sent to Minors (Fort Myers) for rehabilitation, May 31; reinstated from the 15-day disabled list, June 5. 2011: Acquired by the San Diego Padres off of waivers from the Minnesota Twins, March 20. 2012: Signed by the Baltimore Orioles to a Minor League contract, Jan. 30 acquired by the Oakland Athletics via trade from the Baltimore Orioles in exchange for future considerations. 2014: Signed by the St. Louis Cardinals to a Minor League contract, Feb. 6 signed by the Houston Astros to a three-year contract, Dec. 12, 2014. 2016: Acquired by the Philadelphia Phillies via trade from the Houston Astros in exchange for future considerations. 2017: Placed on the paternity list, April 19; reinstated, April 21 acquired by the Colorado Rockies via trade from the Philadelphia Phillies in exchange for INF Jose Gomez, RHP J.D. Hammer and RHP Alejandro Requena. 2016 HIGHS AND LOWS CAREER 1.1, May 29 at LAA... Most IP... 2.2, Aug. 1, 2006 vs. Texas None...Low-hit CG...None 3, Sept. 28 vs. SEA... Runs... 4, 2x, last: Aug. 29, 2014 vs. CHC 3, Sept. 28 vs. SEA... ER...4, Aug. 29, 2014 vs. CHC 3, Sept. 28 vs. SEA...Hits... 5, Sept. 26, 2014 at ARI 1, 6x, last: Sept. 28 vs. SEA...HRs...2, 4x, last: July 31, 2015 vs. ARI 2, 3x, last: Sept. 28 vs. SEA...Walks... 4, July 26, 2011 vs. ARI 2, 10x, last: Sept. 28 vs. SEA...Strikeouts...4, 3x, last: Aug. 10, 2014 at BAL None... 10+ Strikeout Games...None 2, May June 4-15...Win Streak...7, June 25, 2013-Aug. 19, 2014 1, 2x, last: July 19 at OAK...Losing Streak... 6, June 27-Sept. 18, 2015 ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR 143

zac rosscup Left-Handed Pitcher Ht: 6-2 Wt: 220 B/T: R/L Opening Day Age: 28 Born: June 9, 1988 in Clackamas, Ore. Major League Service: 2.105 Contract: Through 2017 Obtained: Acquired via trade from Chicago-NL on June 26, 2017 CAREER HIGHLIGHTS Acquired by Colorado from Chicago-NL in exchange for right-handed pitcher Matt Carasiti, June 26 added to the 40-man roster and optioned to Triple-A Albuquerque. Missed the entire 2016 season after undergoing surgery on his left shoulder May 13. Originally selected by Tampa Bay in the 28th round of the 2009 First-Year Player Draft out of Chemeketa Community College in Salem, Ore. Acquired by the Cubs in January 2011 as part of an eight-player deal with the Tampa Bay Rays. ROSSCUP 2016: Missed the entire season with an injured left shoulder that required debridement surgery on May 13. Originally placed on the 60-day disabled list on Feb. 16 activated from the disabled list Nov. 7 and declared a free agent, Dec. 2. Signed a Minor League contract with Chicago-NL with an invite to Major League Spring Training on Dec. 9. 2015: Went 2-1 with a 4.39 ERA (26.2 IP, 13 ER) in a career-high 33 games across three stints with the Cubs. Recorded six holds with 13 walks and 29 strikeouts held left-handed hitters to a.158 average (6-for-38). Allowed one or zero runs in 30 of his 33 outings. Pitched a career-high two scoreless innings April 18 vs. San Diego. Was placed on the 15-day disabled list June 17 with left shoulder inflammation. Made 11 relief appearances with Triple-A Iowa, posting a 4.76 ERA (11.1 IP, 6 ER) recorded 20 strikeouts with four walks. 2014: Made 18 relief appearances in seven stints with the Cubs and went 1-0 with a 9.45 ERA (13.1 IP, 14 ER). Struck out 21 batters in 13.1 innings with the Cubs, a 14.2 strikeouts per nine innings ratio. Was placed on the 15-day disabled list, May 14 (retroactive to May 10) with left shoulder soreness reinstated June 14 and optioned to Iowa. Recorded his first Major League win, Sept. 23 vs. St. Louis tossed a scoreless inning. Spent a majority of the season with Triple-A Iowa, going 2-0 with four saves and a 2.10 ERA (30.0 IP, 7 ER) in 29 games held opponents to a.173 (18-for-104) batting average. 2013: Made his Major League debut on Sept. 3 vs. Miami, going on to post a 1.35 ERA (6.2 IP, 1 ER) in 10 appearances with the Cubs. Was recalled on Sept. 3 and made his Major League debut vs. Miami that day worked 0.2 scoreless innings with one strikeout. Did not allow a run in nine of his 10 relief appearances with the Cubs walked seven and struck out seven. Combined to go 2-2 with three saves and a 2.12 ERA (51.0 IP, 12 ER) in 46 relief appearances between Double-A Tennessee and Triple-A Iowa. Between Double-A and Triple-A, struck out 83 batters in 51 innings, a 14.6 strikeouts per nine innings rate. 2012: Went 2-1 with a 3.45 ERA (31.1 IP, 12 ER) and 45 strikeouts in 15 games between Double-A Tennessee, Single-A Peoria and Rookie Level Mesa. Spent the first two months of the season on the disabled list with left elbow tendinitis before returning in June. Did not allow a run in four combined appearances with Peoria and Mesa was 0-1 with a 4.84 ERA (22.1 IP, 12 ER) in 11 games, one start, with Tennessee. 2011: In his first season with the Cubs organization, went 4-2 with a 2.54 ERA (49.2 IP, 14 ER) in 11 games, nine starts, with High-A Daytona. ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR 141

(ROSSCUP, continued) Acquired by the Cubs in January along with right-handed pitcher Matt Garza and outfielder Fernando Perez from the Tampa Bay Rays in exchange for right-handed pitcher Chris Archer, catcher Robinson Chirinos, infielder Hak-Ju Lee, outfielder Sam Fuld and outfielder Brandon Guyer. Placed on the disabled list from June 23-Sept. 12 with a left shoulder sprain, ending his season. 2010: Appeared in 12 games with eight starts between Short Season Hudson Valley and the Gulf Coast Rays in the Tampa Bay Rays organization. Went 3-1 with one save, a 2.64 ERA (44.1 IP, 13 ER), 41 strikeouts and nine walks between the two stops. Began the season with the Gulf Coast Rays, logging a 1.04 ERA (8.2 IP, 1 ER) in three games, one start. Promoted to Hudson Valley, July 17 and went 3-1 with a save and a 3.03 ERA (35.2 IP, 12 ER) in nine games, seven starts struck out 35 batters while not allowing a home run in 35.2 innings. Struck out a career-high 10 hitters in 5.2 innings, Aug. 23 vs. Brooklyn. ROSSCUP 2009: Went 3-4 with a 2.68 ERA (40.1 IP, 12 ER) and 27 strikeouts in 10 games, nine starts, in his first professional season with Rookie Level Princeton. Earned his first professional win, July 28 at Bluefield, allowing two unearned runs in five innings. Did not allow a home run in 40.1 innings. PERSONAL: Zachary M. Rosscup native of Portland, Ore., was selected by the Tampa Bay Rays in the 28th round of the 2009 First-Year Player Draft out of Chemeketa Community College in Salem, Ore. ROSSCUP S CAREER RECORD Year Team W L ERA G GS CG SHO GF SV IP H R ER HR HB BB IBB SO WP BK 2009 Princeton 3 4 2.68 10 9 0 0 1 0 40.1 41 20 12 0 1 6 0 27 4 0 2010 Hudson Valley 3 1 3.03 9 7 0 0 1 1 35.2 27 16 12 0 0 7 0 35 2 0 GCL Rays 0 0 1.04 3 1 0 0 0 0 8.2 5 3 1 0 1 2 1 6 0 0 2011 Daytona 4 2 2.54 11 9 0 0 0 0 49.2 43 17 14 4 2 19 0 50 0 0 2012 AZL Cubs 0 0 0.00 1 0 0 0 0 0 1.2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 Peoria 2 0 0.00 3 0 0 0 0 0 7.1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 0 0 Tennessee 0 1 4.84 11 1 0 0 0 0 22.1 14 12 12 1 1 19 0 29 3 0 2013 Tennessee 2 1 2.49 37 0 0 0 11 3 43.1 31 12 12 2 0 19 0 66 3 0 Iowa 0 1 5.87 9 0 0 0 2 0 7.2 5 5 0 0 0 6 0 17 0 0 CHICAGO-NL 0 0 1.35 10 0 0 0 3 0 6.2 3 1 1 1 0 7 1 7 0 0 2014 Iowa 2 0 2.10 29 0 0 0 9 4 30.0 18 7 7 0 0 15 2 38 2 0 CHICAGO-NL 1 0 9.45 18 0 0 0 5 0 13.1 14 14 14 2 0 12 1 21 0 0 2015 AZL Cubs 0 0 0.00 2 1 0 0 0 0 2.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 Tennessee 0 0 3.86 3 0 0 0 1 1 2.1 2 1 1 0 0 2 0 7 1 0 Iowa 0 0 4.76 1 0 0 0 0 0 11.1 8 7 6 1 1 4 0 20 2 0 CHICAGO-NL 2 1 4.39 33 0 0 0 6 0 26.2 26 13 13 5 0 13 0 29 1 0 2016 DID NOT PITCH Minor League Totals 18 12 2.64 156 29 0 0 28 10 290.0 218 109 85 11 8 107 3 355 17 0 Major League Totals 3 1 5.32 62 0 0 0 14 0 47.1 43 28 28 8 0 32 2 57 1 0 ROSSCUP S CAREER TRANSACTIONS 2009: Selected by Tampa Bay in the 28th round of the First-Year Player Draft. 2011: Acquired by Chicago-NL along with RHP Matt Garza and OF Fernando Perez from Tampa Bay in exchange for RHP Chris Archer, C Robinson Chirinos, INF Hak-Ju Lee, OF Sam Fuld and OF Brandon Guyer, Jan. 8. 2014: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (left shoulder soreness), May 14; sent to Minors for rehabilitation (Iowa), June 7; reinstated from 15-day disabled list and optioned to Iowa, June 14. 2015: Placed on the 15-day disabled list (left shoulder inflammation), June 17; sent to Minors for rehabilitation, July 15; reinstated from 15-day disabled list and optioned to Iowa, Aug. 13. 2016: Placed on the 60-day disabled list (left shoulder inflammation), Feb. 26; reinstated from the 60-day disabled list, Nov. 7 signed by Chicago-NL to a Minor League contract, Dec. 9. 2017: Designated for assignment, June 22; acquired by Colorado from Chicago-NL in exchange for RHP Matt Carasiti, June 26. 2015 HIGHS AND LOWS CAREER 2.0, April 18 vs. SD... Most IP... 2.0, April 18, 2015 vs. SD None...Low-hit CG...None 2, 3x, last: Sept. 19 vs. STL... Runs... 6, Aug. 30, 2014 at STL 2, 3x, last: Sept. 19 vs. STL... ER... 6, Aug. 30, 2014 at STL 3, 2x, last: Sept. 19 vs. STL...Hits... 3, 3x, last: Sept. 19, 2015 vs. STL 2, May 10 at MIL...HRs...2, May 10, 2015 at MIL 2, 3x, last: Sept. 18 vs. STL...Walks... 3, Aug. 30, 2014 at STL 3, 3x, last: Sept. 7 at STL...Strikeouts...3, 5x, last: Sept. 7, 2015 at STL None... 10+ Strikeout Games...None 1, 2x, last: May 31 vs. KC...Win Streak...2, Sept. 23, 2014-April 18, 2015 1, May 22 at ARI...Losing Streak...1, May 22, 2015 at ARI 142 ROCKIES.com Twitter.com/Rockies Twitter.com/RockiesPR