Windsor Star

Astros getting long-term relief from right-hander Devenski

- DAVE SHEININ

In the wake of the Cleveland Indians’ run to the American League pennant last fall — a run built largely on the arms of bullpen ace Andrew Miller and his fellow lateinning relievers — many in the industry wondered whether manager Terry Francona’s model of using his best relievers for multi-inning stints in the highest-leverage situations of most games could be replicated in the regular season.

The answer seemed to be: not really. With the everyday nature of the regular season (as opposed to the frequent off-days in the postseason), you would risk burning out your best relievers by using them too frequently, and for too long.

But in the early days of the 2017 season, we can already discern a Franconian shift taking place in reliever usage. More teams appear to have identified one or more bullpen aces, who increasing­ly are being used for longer stints in highlevera­ge situations.

With that in mind, you may want to get to know the name Chris Devenski, if you haven’t already.

On Thursday in Houston, the Astros’ right-hander entered with two outs and two on in the seventh inning of a game in which the Astros were leading the Los Angeles Angels by two runs, and struck out Danny Espinosa to end the seventh. He then remained in the game for the eighth, stayed in the game for the ninth — surviving a solo home run by Mike Trout — and closed out the win.

That’s a seven-out save — the first by a pitcher who entered with a lead of three runs or fewer (in other words, in non-mop-up duty) in more than four years, since Detroit’s Drew Smyly logged a four-inning save in a win over the Yankees in April 2013.

It was Devenski’s first save of the season (and second of his career), but it wasn’t the first time this season he has saved the Astros, who are in first place in the American League West. Twice in the season’s first seven games, Astros manager A.J. Hinch used him for four-inning stints that stretched into extra innings, with the Astros winning both games. But the correspond­ing price has been steep: after those marathon appearance­s, Devenski got three and four days off, respective­ly.

“It’s not easy,” Hinch said after the second of those. “But we needed him to get two of our four wins. When the situation calls for it, I can stretch him out. It does cost us the next couple days, which is why it’s key to win those games when I use him that way.”

In other words, Devenski has been to the Astros in April what Miller, essentiall­y, was to the Indians in October: a shutdown fireman who can enter in any inning necessary, pitch multiple high-leverage innings and occasional­ly close a game out.

Devenski’s numbers this season are Miller-like: a 1.35 ERA, a batting-average-against of .149, an OPS-against of .465, 25 strikeouts and only one walk in 13.1 innings.

Whereas Miller, a lefty, uses a wipeout slider as his primary out pitch, Devenski, a right-hander, uses a devastatin­g change-up as his. He actually struck out one batter Thursday on a change-up that bounced in front of home plate.

But Devenski isn’t the only reliever being used in unconventi­onal ways. According to the Play Index tool at the indispensa­ble BaseballRe­ference.com, it is happening all over.

In 2016, through the season’s first 20 days, there were 20 instances of a reliever pitching two or more innings in a game in which his average leverage index was 1.5 or greater. (Leverage index is a measure of how critical each plate appearance is to the outcome of the game, with 1.0 being average and 2.0 or greater being high-leverage. An average leverage index of 1.5 or greater for an outing simply means the pitcher was pitching in higher-than-average situations throughout.)

 ?? BOB LEVEY/GETTY IMAGES ?? Chris Devenski has been a shutdown pitcher who can enter in any inning necessary, and occasional­ly close out a game.
BOB LEVEY/GETTY IMAGES Chris Devenski has been a shutdown pitcher who can enter in any inning necessary, and occasional­ly close out a game.

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