The Niagara Falls Review

Veteran reliever hopes to turn season around with Blue Jays

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MELISSA COUTO

THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Joaquin Benoit is hoping a change of scenery will do him some good.

The right-handed reliever, acquired by the Blue Jays late Tuesday night in a trade that sent fellow right-hander Drew Storen to the Seattle Mariners, arrived at Rogers Centre early Wednesday morning ready for a fresh start.

Benoit, who turned 39 on Tuesday, struggled in Seattle this season, racking up a 5.18 earnedrun average over 26 appearance­s out of the bullpen, and walking 5.5 batters per nine innings, his highest walk rate since 2008 in Texas.

“At first (at the beginning of the season) I was having soreness in my shoulder and had some inflammati­on so I wasn’t able to control my arm,” Benoit said of his struggles. “But now I throw way better, I feel like I can contribute more to the team and I guess the move was right on time.”

Benoit is 55-43 with a 3.87 ERA in 687 career games, including 55 career starts, spanning 15 major league seasons. He was acquired by Seattle from San Diego in exchange for right-hander Enyel De Los Santos and infielder Nelson Ward in November, 2015.

Benoit last pitched on Sunday, going one scoreless inning in a 2-0 Mariners loss at Toronto.

“That’s the business side of baseball — you play on one team and the next day you’re somewhere else,” Benoit said. “I was here two days ago and now I’m back.”

Benoit took a 7 a.m. Wednesday flight out of Pittsburgh, where the Mariners are playing an interleagu­e series against the Pirates.

He said he found out about the trade late Tuesday night after Seattle’s 7-4 win at PNC Park and hadn’t yet talked to Toronto manager John Gibbons about how he’ll be used out of the bullpen.

“We’ll see how he pitches,” Gibbons said. “He’s a good veteran, he’s been around.

“He’s still getting his strikeouts, that kind of thing. He’s a veteran guy, he still has a good solid arm.”

Storen, 28, was designated for assignment Sunday by Toronto after going 1-3 with three saves and a 6.21 ERA in 38 appearance­s.

“Hopefully I can help the team and achieve the goal to get in the playoffs and go forward from that,” Benoit said. “You know it’s exciting when you’re close to the playoffs. Two months until the end of the season, we can do big things.”

RYAN MCKENNA

THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — In the days leading up to the Rogers Cup, tournament organizers were forced to announce one major withdrawal after another.

By the start of the men’s tennis showcase, top draws Roger Federer, Andy Murray and Rafael Nadal were among the no-shows.

But the emergence of a homegrown teen star has helped ease the sting for tournament director Karl Hale.

Denis Shapovalov, 17, upset Australia’s Nick Kyrgios in three sets on Monday night in his main draw debut. The Richmond Hill, Ont., player requested to play on centre court despite being the youngest player in the tournament.

“It was the best atmosphere that I’ve ever seen on a Monday night,” Hale said. “Playing a 19th ranked player and beating him in three sets was the most amazing thing I’ve seen. The most electric atmosphere on a Monday night we’ve ever had.”

S h a p o v a l o v h a s q u i c k l y become the story and star of the tournament.

The lefty has been given a prime spot on Wednesday’s schedule, following another homegrown star, Milos Raonic, on centre court in the evening draw. Raonic was scheduled to play his tournament opener against Yen-Hsun Lu.

Shapovalov’s image — alongside Raonic and world No. 1 Novak Djokovic — has also been added to the main page on the tournament website.

“We want to promote Canadians which we never have been able to do in the past because they haven’t gone as deep as we wanted,” Hale said. “But now we have the Wimbledon junior champion, we have a Wimbledon finalist in Milos, both playing Wednesday night against some great, great opponents so it’s going to be an electric night.”

Shapovalov was staying humble when asked about now being a face of the tournament.

“It’s exciting,” he said. “I’m trying to not look at it too much in that way. Just trying to focus on myself, focus on playing the match, I’m not trying to look around too much.”

It’s been a hectic month for Shapovalov. After winning the Wimbledon boys title earlier this month, he’s faced an abundance of media and fan attention before making his senior debut at the Citi Open in Washington, D.C., last week. Shapovalov played Lukas Lacko tight, but eventually fell in three sets.

His coach Adriano Fuorivia — who is assisted by Shapovalov’s mom Tessa — thinks the teen has handled the attention quite well.

“(Denis was) getting a little bit of fame and getting messages from people that he hasn’t heard of in five years,” Fuorivia said. “But on top of that, it’s about being able to turn that off — turning that switch off and getting back to work.”

Bulgaria’s Grigor Dimitrov, Shapovalov’s opponent on Wednesday, is no stranger to the youngster. The two hit and practise together occasional­ly and according to Fuorivia, Dimitrov greets Shapovalov all the time.

Despite the two knowing each other, Shapovalov doesn’t expect there to be any favours coming his way as he looks to advance to the third round.

“It’s going to be a tough match for me,” he said. “I don’t think it’s going to be any easier than when I played Nick.

“He’s an experience­d player, there’s no reason why he shouldn’t be in the top 10.”

Having an emergence of youth on the ATP World Tour with the likes of 22-year-old and world No. 9 Dominic Thiem and Shapovalov is also a welcome sight for veterans like Tomas Berdych.

“I think it’s great that tennis is seeing a new face coming up,” Berdych said. “I think the last couple years it was quite steady, not many new faces coming in, so I think he definitely has the weapons to come up and when he shapes up the other things, he can become a really top player.”

 ?? AARON VINCENT ELKAIM/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Denis Shapovalov, of Richmond Hill, Ont., celebrates his win, in three sets, against Nick Kyrgios during the first round of the Rogers Cup Monday in Toronto.
AARON VINCENT ELKAIM/THE CANADIAN PRESS Denis Shapovalov, of Richmond Hill, Ont., celebrates his win, in three sets, against Nick Kyrgios during the first round of the Rogers Cup Monday in Toronto.
 ?? TOM SZCERBOWSK­I/GETTY IMAGES ?? Joaquin Benoit makes his Blue Jays debut during Toronto’s loss to the San Diego Padres on Wednesday.
TOM SZCERBOWSK­I/GETTY IMAGES Joaquin Benoit makes his Blue Jays debut during Toronto’s loss to the San Diego Padres on Wednesday.
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