Houston Chronicle Sunday

Toronto turns to Sanchez in first shot to close out Texas

- By Ian Harrison

TORONTO — Aaron Sanchez was supposed to be in the Blue Jays’ bullpen by now. Instead, the AllStar righthande­r will start against the Texas Rangers on Sunday night, hoping to pitch Toronto into the AL Championsh­ip Series.

When the 24-year-old Sanchez cracked Toronto’s starting rotation after a solid performanc­e in spring training, the team said it planned to move him to a relief role at some point to limit his workload. The thinking was a full season of starting would be too much for a pitcher whose previ- ous career high was 1331⁄ innings, reached at three levels in 2014.

“We were all set that he was going to eventually end upin the bullpen,” Blue Jays manager John Gibbons said as both teams worked out Saturday for Game 3 of the AL Division Series. “That was the plan in spring training.”

Those plans went out the window as Sanchez pitched like an ace, earned an AllStar berth and led the AL with a 3.00 ERA.

“We thought it would be crazy to take him out of that role,” Gibbons said. “He’s been so good, one of the best pitchers in baseball.”

Sanchez got extra rest between starts over the final two months, even spending 10 days in the minor leagues, in order to stay fresh. Toronto also acquired lefthander Francisco Liriano at the trade deadline and briefly used a six-man rotation to spread the work out even more.

Neither the extended rest nor the 10 days he spent at Class A Dunedin were any kind of issue to Sanchez.

“I knew we had something special with this club, and I wanted to be a part of it,” he said. “To be here to pitch in a game like (Game 3), I’m just blessed with the opportunit­y to go out there and compete.”

Sanchez has not pitched since allowing one run in seven innings to beat Boston on the final day of the regular season — a victory that ensured Toronto would host the AL wildcard game.

Sanchez made one start against the Rangers this season, and it wasn’t his best. He allowed six earned runs, matching a season worst, and seven hits in 62⁄ innings of a 7-6 loss on May 15.

With Texas facing eliminatio­n after losing the first two games at home, Sanchez presents a tough test in an even tougher situation.

Rangers shortstop Elvis Andrus said the key is to stay aggressive at the plate.

“He’s a power pitcher, and we know he’s going to try and establish himself and his pitch early,” Andrus said. “Don’t let him get comfortabl­e. When you face guys like him, the last thing you want is them to feel comfortabl­e on the mound.”

Righthande­r Colby Lewis, whois 4-1 with a 2.38 ERA in nine career postseason games, will start for the Rangers.

“He can definitely be our stopper,” Texas catcher Jonathan Lucroy said.

Texas has not been swept in a playoff series since back-to-back ALDS losses to the New York Yankees in 1998 and 1999. Dating to 2015, the Rangers have lost five consecutiv­e postseason games, all to Toronto.

“There’s no panic in this club,” Rangers manager Jeff Banister said.

Liriano, who has made two relief appearance­s this postseason, was removed from the ALDS roster Saturday after he suffered a concussion in Game 2.

Righthande­r Danny Barnes will replace Liriano, who left in the eighth inning Friday after being hit in the back of the head by Carlos Gomez’s line drive.

Liriano is not eligible to return for seven days.

Players who suffer a concussion must be cleared by Major League Baseball before returning.

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