Regina Leader-Post

INFLAMED SHOULDER PUTS STRO SHOW ON HOLD FOR JAYS

Opening-day status in doubt, but Stroman vows he will be ready to go as season begins

- STEVE BUFFERY sbuffer @postmedia.com

The Stro Show has been put on temporary hiatus.

The Toronto Blue Jays announced Tuesday that righthande­d pitcher Marcus Stroman — the club’s best starter last season — is suffering from inflammati­on in his right shoulder and is being “backed off” at spring training.

“I’m just going to deal with it now and hopefully, get back for the beginning of the season,” Stroman said. “We had an MRI, everything is fine, it’s super clean. Just a matter of taking it where I need to go the next few days, getting the inflammati­on out and going from there. Rather just knock it out now and be good for the year.

“I’m totally all for being back for the beginning of the season,” added Stroman, who went 13-9 with a 3.09 ERA last season. “I don’t know if I’ll be back for opening day, but I know I’ll be back, hopefully, at the very beginning of the season.”

If Stroman can’t make his first start in the regular season, RHP Joe Biagini will likely step in.

Stroman, 26, was quick to pour water on suggestion­s that his experiment­ing with different arm slots in his delivery had anything to do with the inflammati­on.

“Not at all slightly,” Stroman said. “I’ve been playing with arm slots my whole career, since I was a little kid. So that has nothing to do with it.

“I look at this as an opportunit­y to make my arm stronger, to grow physically, mentally, emotionall­y,” added Stroman, who recovered from a torn ACL in his left knee in 2015, which required surgery, in only five months. “I look at any type of adversity as just an opportunit­y to get better. I’m not slightly worried about it.”

THE BOSS HAS ARRIVED

The Jays confirmed that they signed a one-year, US$1.75 million contract (with a vesting option for 2019) with 35-year-old RHP Seung-hwan Oh, who came to MLB in 2016 after 11 years in the Korean Baseball Organizati­on and Nippon Profession­al League.

During his time in Korea, Oh posted a 1.81 ERA and 357 saves, earning himself the nickname “The Final Boss” as his team’s closer. In his first MLB season in 2016, he compiled a 1.92 ERA in 76 appearance­s with the

St. Louis Cardinals, striking out 103 batters and saving 19 games. His numbers slipped last year with St. Louis, posting a 4.10 ERA over 591/3 innings. Oh said there was no reason for his dip last year other than it was just a one of those seasons.

“No big problem really,” Oh said through his interprete­r Eugene Koo. “I’m just going to make it up this year.”

To make room on the 40-man roster, outfielder Ezequiel Carrera was designated for assignment. Jays manager John Gibbons said he was sad to see Carrera go.

“Zee’s done a lot of good things for this team and you hate for it to happen, but the way the team was put together, numbers weren’t in his favour and we’d been looking to beef up our bullpen,” Gibbons said. “You know, Zee will do all right. He’ll do all right somewhere. But yeah, it’s tough. I’ve got a special place for the guy.”

As for what role Oh will play, Gibbons won’t say at this point, though the Jays’ closer is still Roberto Osuna.

“You bring in a guy like Oh for a reason,” Gibbons said. “He’s had some success in certain roles, so it’s just going to add to that. Gives us a little more depth down there where you don’t have to kill somebody. We’ll see how it all shapes up. But he’s going to pitch some important innings, I know that.”

Oh said he has never been to Canada, but has heard good things about Toronto and is excited that there is a large Korean population.

Oh could not pass a physical given by the Texas Rangers medical staff earlier this offseason, and that club backed out of negotiatio­ns, but he passed a Jays’ physical. Oh said he is 100 per cent healthy.

GAME GAB

Neither Aaron Judge nor Giancarlo Stanton played for the New York Yankees against the Jays at Dunedin Stadium on Tuesday, a 9-8 Toronto loss.

Russ Martin, Deck McGuire and Jason Leblebijia­n all smacked homers for Toronto. Anthony Alford went 2-for-2 with a triple and three RBI.

Jays starter Marco Estrada looked good in his one inning of work, throwing 11 pitches, five for strikes, while not giving up a hit and striking out one, throwing a couple of change-ups. The plan was to go just one inning.

“I felt really good, about as good as I can feel,” Estrada said. “I’m ready to get this going. I just got to build stamina. As much as you run and work out, it doesn’t compare to being out there and throwing the baseball. I don’t know what it is about that, you got to use every single little muscle in your body to throw a baseball and I felt it today. I could have kept going but I did feel like I threw 5-6 innings. So it’s just building up the stamina.”

 ?? FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Marcus Stroman has been shut down from any spring training appearance­s while he deals with inflammati­on in his right shoulder, but Stroman says he expects to “get back for the beginning of the season.”
FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Marcus Stroman has been shut down from any spring training appearance­s while he deals with inflammati­on in his right shoulder, but Stroman says he expects to “get back for the beginning of the season.”
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