Orlando Sentinel

■ Athletics:

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Bench coach Ryan Christenso­n has apologized for raising his arm during a postgame celebratio­n in what looked like a Nazi salute. Christenso­n made the gesture while greeting closer Liam Hendriks following the A’s 6-4 win over the Texas Rangers on Thursday. Hendriks immediatel­y pushed Christenso­n’s arm down and cameras then showed him laughing and briefly raising his arm a second time. Christenso­n faced criticism after video of the gesture circulated on social media. “I made a mistake and will not deny it,” Christenso­n said in a statement issued through the team. “Today in the dugout I greeted players with a gesture that was offensive. In the world today of COVID, I adapted our elbow bump, which we do after wins, to create some distance with the players. My gesture unintentio­nally resulted in a racist and horrible salute that I do not believe in. What I did is unacceptab­le and I deeply apologize.”

■ Indians: Hitting coach Ty Van Burkleo has opted out of the 2020 season due to concerns about contractin­g the coronaviru­s. Team President Chris Antonetti said Friday that Van Burkelo had been contemplat­ing his departure for some time because of a personal high-risk condition and for his family. The Van Burkleos have a special needs child. Antonetti said the challenges of traveling and the lack of room in road ballparks may have been the tipping point for the 57-year-old Van Burkleo, who is in his eighth season with the club. He had been facing criticism over Cleveland’s early offensive strugglele­nges,” he said.

■ Nationals: World Series MVP Stephen Strasburg is scheduled to make his season debut on Sunday against the Orioles after being sidelined by a nerve problem in his pitching hand. Strasburg missed what would have been his first two appearance­s of 2020 after making all 33 starts last year and then becoming the first pitcher to finish a postseason with a 5-0 record. “The tingling in his thumb is gone, and that’s a good sign. We watched him and he’s throwing some really good bullpens. That was the big thing for me: Nothing in his mechanics has changed. Everything’s good,” manager Dave Martinez said Friday before Washington’s series opener against visiting Baltimore.

■ Orioles: Even Chris Davis got in on the act for the suddenly slugging Orioles, doubling his season total by collecting two of the Orioles’ 19 hits and raising his average from .087 to .143 in an 11-0 victory over the Nationals. Seven of the Orioles’ nine starting position players each got at least a pair of hits. Jose Iglesias led the way by going 4 for 4 with three RBIs, and Renato Nunez added a three-run homer to back Tommy Milone, whose six-inning outing was the longest by an Orioles pitcher this year. Milone, who was drafted by the Nationals in 2008 and briefly pitched for them in 2011 and 2018, allowed just three hits and didn’t walk anyone. The Orioles were coming off getting swept in four games at home by the cobbled-together, coronaviru­s-struck Marlins.

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