Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Hunter doing fine after battle with coronaviru­s

- By Matthew DeGeorge mdegeorge@21st-centurymed­ia.com @sportsdoct­ormd on Twitter

PHILADELPH­IA » It’s been 36 days since Tommy Hunter was diagnosed with COVID-19. And even though his symptoms were gone in three days, the confusion around the disease still lingers.

“It reminded me of that movie Twister where at the beginning Helen Hunt’s like, have you seen a tornado miss that house, miss that house, miss that house, miss this house and then hit your house?,” Hunter said Sunday before the Phillies’ 11-6 loss to Miami. “That popped into my head as something that stuck with me. Like, this is crazy. None of these other people are getting it and we got it.”

Hunter’s ordeal with the disease was pretty physically benign he said, a headache and what felt like a sinus infection that was gone in less than a week. His wife had a worse bout and his kids, ages two and four, also tested positive but were largely asymptomat­ic. What was more perplexing to the Phillies reliever is how the virus hopped without much rhyme or reason around the people in his life – not to Hunter’s father or to neighbors whose kids played with Hunter’s kids or to a couple Hunter and his wife had dinner with.

Or how the testing works: Hunter tested positive, then negative, allowing him and his family to leave their rented house in Florida and return to Ohio … only to get another seven positives tests before another negative.

“It was a weird situation, frustratin­g to say the least,” Hunter said. “Having to take your kids to go get more tests and then holding your two-year-old’s head down while they’re sticking that stuff up there and then blood just squirting out of your kid’s nose. It’s an ideal situation. There’s a lot of stuff that you dealt with that a lot of other people have dealt with. You keep going forward.”

Everyone is doing well now, Hunter said. He stayed around Clearwater after Phillies camp was shut down in March and was able to keep up his throwing regimen, mostly into a net. He didn’t get into an intrasquad game until July 17 and has been playing catch up.

But the early results are good. He tossed a clean eighth in Saturday’s win over the Marlins, working around a walk and a hit.

“Catching up a little bit but I feel like I’m ready,” he said. “I feel like I’m going to be able to compete at a pretty high level. Like I said, I think it’s going to get better.”

•••

The Phillies will get an extra series in town this week. Instead of a three-game weekend set at Toronto, the Blue Jays will come to Philly and be the home team.

The Blue Jays are unable to host games in Toronto due to COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns, with MLB’s exemption request denied. A bid to play in Pittsburgh was rebuffed, so the Jays will play their home games in Buffalo. While Sahlen Field is readied, the Blue Jays will hit the road and be the “home” team on the scoreboard in Washington Wednesday and Thursday, and in Philadelph­ia Friday, Saturday and Sunday. First pitch the first two games are 6:37 with a 3:07 getaway Sunday.

•••

NOTES » The Phillies had 12 hits but just six runs Sunday thanks to 14 men left on base. The Phillies were

2-for-13 with runners in scoring position, leaving the bases loaded in the fifth, sixth and eighth innings. “I thought we had some pretty good at-bats today,” manager Joe Girardi said. “… I didn’t see guys swinging and missing. I saw some popups that they got, and that’s probably staying a little more patient and staying off the high pitch that looks great to everyone no matter what type of hitter you are. I think the approach has been pretty discipline­d, but that’s the time that we chased up a little bit, and it’s hard to be successful when you do that.” … One bright spot was Adam Haseley in the leadoff spot, who went 4-for-6 and reached based five times, his first career four-hit game. He doubled twice, scored twice and drove in a run. … Bryce Harper staked the Phillies to a 4-0 lead with a three-run homer in the first inning.

 ?? CHRIS SZAGOLA - FOR THE
ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Phillies reliever pitcher Tommy Hunter delivers a pitch in Saturday’s 7-1 victory over the Miami Marlins. Hunter is doing well after a bout with COVID-19.
CHRIS SZAGOLA - FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Phillies reliever pitcher Tommy Hunter delivers a pitch in Saturday’s 7-1 victory over the Miami Marlins. Hunter is doing well after a bout with COVID-19.

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