Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Three starters deal with tender pins

- BY DARYL VAN SCHOUWEN, STAFF REPORTER dvanschouw­en@suntimes.com | @CST_soxvan

SAN FRANCISCO — Pitchers are accustomed to pitching with arm discomfort and figuring out ways to deal with it — it comes with the job. But working through lower-body issues can pose more uncommon challenges, which is something Michael Kopech is working through with soreness in his right knee.

“There are adjustment­s you have to make when you tweak something, but it’s gotten better from start to start,” Kopech said. “I’m making progress with it.”

Since leaving a start against the Rangers after 13 pitches June 12, Kopech has allowed 10 earned runs in 16„ innings covering three starts. The knee is something he might have to work through the rest of the season.

“The main thing is trusting it,” he said. “There were a couple times, in Houston and Baltimore especially, I tried to do a little too much to get velocity. I was a little worried it wasn’t going to be there in those moments and just made bad pitches and wasted pitches. It’s just standing on it, trusting it and throwing with what I have that day.”

Kopech isn’t the only Sox pitcher dealing with lower-half soreness. Lance Lynn, who pitched six scoreless innings in the Sox’ 1-0 win over the Giants on Friday, tore a tendon in his right knee during spring training and had surgery. It took him four starts to look like himself.

“It’s coming back. That’s part of the process,” Lynn said.

Dylan Cease was checked by trainer James Kruk during the Sox’ 5-3 victory over the Giants on Saturday when he felt “a little groin tenderness for a pitch.”

“Through the course of a season, we’re never going to feel 100%,” Cease said. “Just a little mild soreness, and I’ll work through it. It will be fine, nothing too serious.”

Kopech had a preexistin­g cyst in the knee area that created his problem. Fluid was drained, and he pitched a week later.

“I don’t know if we know what to call it,” Kopech said. “There are some theories how the cyst formed, we don’t really know. It’s not 100%, but it’s about as close as it could be. I look to make every start I can and not miss a beat.”

Kopech will take a 2.78 ERA into his next start Tuesday against the Twins at Guaranteed Rate Field. Per Baseball Reference, his 2.0 wins above replacemen­t lead all Sox players, a fraction above Jose Abreu (1.9).

All-Star finalist

Tim Anderson said “it would be cool” to experience a second All-Star Game.

Anderson was added to the team in 2021. This time, he’s one of two finalists at shortstop, with the Blue Jays’ Bo Bichette.

“It’s definitely dope for people to be voting for me,” Anderson said. “For them to obviously think that much of my game.”

Eloy next week?

Manager Tony La Russa is not ruling out having Eloy Jimenez return from his rehab assignment next week.

“The question is how much does Eloy play in the outfield,” La Russa said. “There’s a lot that’s uncertain about Eloy yet. What’s not uncertain is that we look forward to his return.”

Engel close

La Russa said outfielder Adam Engel’s legs are “feeling good, and he’s running well.” Engel, on the injured list with a hamstring strain, is eligible to return Monday.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Andrew Vaughn and Tim Anderson share a high-five after they crossed the plate on Gavin Sheets’ double during a three-run fourth inning for the Sox.
GETTY IMAGES Andrew Vaughn and Tim Anderson share a high-five after they crossed the plate on Gavin Sheets’ double during a three-run fourth inning for the Sox.

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