Bummer on White Sox Opening Night loss: ‘You get the job done or you don’t’ - Chicago News Weekly

Friday, April 2, 2021

Bummer on White Sox Opening Night loss: ‘You get the job done or you don’t’

Aaron Bummer. (AP) | AP Photos

The problem with making bold statements, and the Sox were full of them during spring training, is the risk of giving someone else the last word.

ANAHEIM, Calif. — The problem with making bold statements, and the Sox were full of them during spring training, is the risk of giving someone else the last word.

During spring training, Aaron Bummer said, “I don’t expect [the Sox] to lose a game if we’re leading after the fifth inning.”

“I really think that the talent in our bullpen is that good to where we should be able to hold leads for our starters regardless of the score.”

It only took one game of the season for the Sox vaunted bullpen to blow a lead, and it was Bummer who served it up. That quote from March made the rounds after he did, and Bummer owned up to the responsibility of allowing the tying and go-ahead runs in the eighth inning in the Sox’ 4-3 loss to the Angels on opening night. He could have deflected it because second baseman Nick Madrigal’s throwing error set up a two-on, nobody out situation with Mike Trout batting for Bummer to tackle.

“You either get the job done or you don’t,” Bummer said. “So at the end of the day, I didn’t get the job done.”

Trout singled in a run and Albert Pujols scored the go-ahead run with a high chopper to third. There wasn’t much contact, but Bummer lost an 11-pitch battle on Justin Upton’s walk.

“That’s on me for not making the pitches I needed to make,” Bummer said, “to be able to get that done.”

Lamb ‘trending up’

Third baseman Jake Lamb, signed after the Braves released him Sunday, said the Sox confidence was plainly apparent already last October when Lamb’s Athletics played them in the Wild Card series.

“No. 1, I noticed the swagger, the swagger of the team as a whole,” Lamb said Friday. “And No. 2, I noticed the bullpen, it’s tough to ignore.”

Lamb gives the Sox a backup to Yoan Moncada, a left-handed bat off the bench and a first baseman, if needed. He was an All-Star with the Diamonbacks in 2017 but has struggled since. He had left rotator cuff surgery in 2018. He says his shoulder is good now.

“Last year I was healthy with Arizona, I just straight up didn’t play well,” he said. “Got in a second chance with Oakland and got in a nice groove. Now I’m here, and I definitely do feel like I’m trending up. It was awesome that these guys gave me a chance, and now I get a chance to prove myself and show these guys it was worth going out and getting me.”

No changing Giolito’s go-to

Lucas Giolito, who retired the first 11 batters he faced Thursday and left with a 3-2 lead in the sixth inning, is trying to incorporate a slider and curveball into his mix but there’s no getting away from elevated four-seam fastball and changeup. Giolito threw 29 changeups of his 87 pitches, getting 12 swings and misses.

One of them, over the middle of the plate, was launched for a homer by Max Stassi.

“The changeup was definitely my go-to offspeed pitch,” Giolito said. “Threw some good ones, left one middle-middle for the homer, that will happen sometimes. I liked the movement on it, the velo difference. I like where it needs to be.”

Giolito’s next start is in Seattle Tuesday.



from Chicago Sun-Times - All https://ift.tt/2OfQz2A

No comments:

Post a Comment