Chicago Sun-Times

Ventura pokes hole in Eaton’ s health update

- BY TOM MUSICK Follow me on Twitter @tcmusick.

Three days after crashing into the outfield wall in Cleveland, Adam Eaton insisted he felt fine.

“Feeling good,” said Eaton, who was held out of the White Sox’ starting lineup Monday night for the third consecutiv­e game. “I can’t speak for [ manager] Robin [ Ventura], but I think the reason I’m not playing today is because of [ the Tampa Bay Rays’ Drew] Smyly, a good lefty.” Ventura had a different answer. “Yeah, he doesn’t feel that good,” Ventura said. “He’s always going to tell you he feels good. Even if he’s getting better, tomorrow is going to be a better day for him.”

Eaton passed concussion protocol after the crash Friday, which forced him to leave in the sixth inning. He said his hip hurt worse than the whiplash he sustained because his hip was the first point of contact with the wall.

Taking swings didn’t pose a problem, Eaton said.

“It’s more my legs and running,” he said. “I think swinging, at least for me, the rotation has been all right.”

In Eaton’s place, Leury Garcia started in center field and batted ninth against the Rays.

“Hopefully, I don’t get ‘ Wally Pipped’ and get replaced,” Eaton said. “I hope I can squeeze back in there.”

Final Sale?

Chris Sale is scheduled to start Tuesday in what could be his final outing of the season. For now, he’s also on track to start the season finale Sunday against the Minnesota Twins, but Ventura said the rotation for the final weekend isn’t set in stone.

“He does have that option right now,” Ventura said of Sale in the finale. “We’ll get in and see how we go through it with this series and see where we are with those guys, see where they are physically, how they’re doing.

“I don’t plan on anything necessaril­y changing. It could change in a couple days, and we’ll see how that goes and make adjustment­s as we go along. We’ve got enough guys here tomake it through. That’s not the issue.”

Sale will try to match a career high with his 17th victory Tuesday. He’s 16- 9 with a 3.19 ERA. He already has logged a career- high 214‰ innings.

Way back when

Ventura caught up Monday on video highlights of the Wrigley Field sendoff for David Ross, his friend and former teammate with the Los Angeles Dodgers. In 2004, Dodgers manager Jim Tracy brought in Ventura to pitch the ninth inning with his team trailing 13- 0. Ross was behind the plate as Ventura climbed the mound.

“He never put down a signal,” Ventura said. “I didn’t throw hard enough for him to put down a signal.”

The slow stuff worked as Ventura pitched a scoreless inning. His only blemish was allowing a single to Darin Erstad.

Ventura said Ross deserved all of his recent recognitio­n as his career winds down.

“When a guy is at the end and he knows he’s at the end, you can have a little more fun,” he said.

 ?? | PAUL BEATY/ AP ?? Sox second baseman Carlos Sanchez throws to first after forcing out the Rays’ Corey Dickerson in the fifth inning.
| PAUL BEATY/ AP Sox second baseman Carlos Sanchez throws to first after forcing out the Rays’ Corey Dickerson in the fifth inning.

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