The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Price may cut back video games

Red Sox lefty, who will pitch Saturday against Toronto Blue Jays, has been diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome

- BY RONALD BLUM

David Price considers himself a gamer – both on and off the field. Now he has to cut down on screen time.

A longtime video game enthusiast, the Boston Red Sox ace was diagnosed this week with carpal tunnel syndrome. He has not pitched since May 3 but is scheduled to return Saturday at Toronto.

He insists that while video games may have contribute­d to the condition, they’re not the origin of the swelling in his left thumb, index finger and middle finger.

“This is just something that happened over time. This didn’t stem from any one thing,” the 32-year-old left-hander said Thursday. “I’m born in 1985, so that’s the video games generation. Being a Red Sox is the least amount of video games I’ve ever played being in Major League Baseball.”

Winner of the 2012 AL Cy Young Award with Tampa Bay, Price is 2-4 with a 5.11 ERA in seven starts during his third season with the Red Sox after agreeing to a $215-million, seven-year contract. The five-time all-star experience­d numbness in his pitching hand during a bullpen session Sunday. He had tests Tuesday and was examined by Dr. Matthew I. Leibman in Newton, Mass.

Price and teammates have been spent many hours competing in the popular Fortnite, trying to fend off monsters and save the world.

“I saw the Brewers were playing Fortnite on their jumbotron. This is very common. I know a lot of teams, a lot of guys, are really into it,” he said. “I’ve always played video games. I’ve always played it with my teammates, during the off-season, at the field, at the hotel. That’s kind of my generation. That’s what we do. If I need to shut down video games and pick up a new hobby, then so be it. But I do not think that’s the cause.”

He added: “If that was the cause of the problem, it started back in 1997 when I got my first PlayStatio­n when I was 12 years old.”

Price threw about 40 pitches in a bullpen session Thursday and pronounced him ready to return this week. His condition will be treated with dry needles, similar to acupunctur­e.

“Obviously it’s going to be outing by outing,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said after watching Price throw at Yankee Stadium. “The communicat­ion has to be there. He has to be honest with us, and we will take care of him.”

Price believes the injury can be controlled. He will wear a brace and will switch to his right hand for activities such as brushing his teeth.

“I don’t think it’s going to go away in its entirety,” he said.

Surgery would be the final option.

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