[外電] Guthrie cleared to start in O's finale
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Guthrie cleared to start in O's finale
Right-hander set for last game of season after stimulated game
By Spencer Fordin / MLB.com
BALTIMORE -- Jeremy Guthrie has just three games left to make his final start
of the season, and the Orioles ace finally seems to have convinced his team's
decision-makers that he's fully over a case of right shoulder impingement.
Guthrie threw a simulated game on Wednesday and got approval to start in
Sunday's season finale against the Blue Jays.
"It's either going to be Sunday or nothing," Guthrie said Wednesday,
explaining his limited options. "I've been a full go for about four days now.
After the second bullpen, I knew there was zero pain and everything felt
normal."
That may have been the case, but manager Dave Trembley wanted to err on the
side of caution. Guthrie has been out for all of September, and the Orioles
have conducted internal discussions about shutting him down for the season.
The right-hander has steadily fought that direction, though, and Trembley
said on Wednesday that he admires his persistence.
"The upside is let him pitch -- let him leave here knowing that he's 100
percent healthy," Trembley said of Guthrie. "We're going to limit, probably
more than what he wants, the number of innings that he throws and the amount
of pitches that he throws. It will be a limited start for him, more like a
Spring Training start. I can tell you honestly, if there was any doubt at all
amongst the coaching staff [and] the medical staff that he wasn't completely
100 percent, we wouldn't do it.
"I'm assuming that he's going to be fine when he comes in here tomorrow. He
wants to throw another light sideline on Friday and do what he normally does
before he starts. I think if he follows everything according to protocol,
it's OK."
Guthrie (10-11, 3.57 ERA) had the same type of injury problems down the
stretch in 2007. The former first-round Draft pick was bothered by a strained
oblique last year, but he still fought threw it to pitch one last time.
Trembley remembered that effort this year, which all but automatically
extended Guthrie the benefit of the doubt.
"When he got done throwing a simulated game," said Trembley, "I walked to the
mound, I shook his hand and I said, 'I just want to thank you for all the
hard work that you had to do in order to get to this particular point in
time.' Because he could have banked it. That's not the kind of person that
Guthrie is. Just like last year, he could have cashed in his chips. ... And
if he passes all the tests and the medical people let him go, these are the
kind of guys I want.
"I want these guys who want to compete for all 162 [games], who want to help
erase the bad feelings that have existed around here for a long time in
September. I want winners, and Guthrie's a winner for me."
Guthrie, of course, is hardly the only injured pitcher Trembley has to worry
about. Baltimore lost Matt Albers and Troy Patton to season-ending injuries
early on and Adam Loewen had an ailment that prematurely ended his pitching
career. Trembley also gave updates on three other injured pitchers -- Daniel
Cabrera, Dennis Sarfate and Jim Miller -- Wednesday.
Sarfate, whose season is done due to a fractured right clavicle, will have a
corrective operation Tuesday. And Cabrera will get his injured right elbow
examined early next week to determine the root of his discomfort. Finally,
Miller, who hurt himself while warming up on Tuesday, is likely done for the
season as a result.
"The injury report the last six weeks has grown in leaps and bounds," said
Trembley. "It seems like every day, I've gotten to a point where I cant
announce who the starting pitchers are because we're trying to piecemeal this
thing together because we've got so many darn guys hurt. Last night was the
coup de grace for me. You've got an eighth-inning guy who's going to come
into the game in Miller. He's [got] two pitches left to throw and he's going
to come into the game. I'm on the top step of the dugout to go out there to
bring him in, and the phone rings and [bullpen coach] Alan Dunn calls down
and says, 'Hey, Miller can't go in. He just got hurt out here.' I think maybe
now we've cleared it all. Maybe that was the last one. That was just
incredible."
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