Orlando Sentinel

McClanahan is working hard toward simple goal: be the best

- By Marc Topkin

NORTH PORT — Shane McClanahan’s performanc­e over the first three months of last season — a 10-3 record with a 1.71 ERA and an All-Star Game start — establishe­d him among the best young starters in the game.

His showing over the second half, including a short injured list stint due to a shoulder issue and a slight dropoff in execution, has driven him to do even better.

That process started about two days after the first-round playoff loss when McClanahan, 25, embarked on a program he said included significan­t changes to his workout routine and lifestyle designed to keep him healthier and stronger over what he hopes to be his first complete season.

“I was really, really frustrated with the injury last year and a couple starts,” he said. “I said to myself, ‘I want to be in that position, going into the end of the year, fully healthy, 100 percent, and feeling stronger than I did maybe in April or May.’ I put in the work and hopefully this translates.”

He started stretching more, and working out smarter. He became pickier about what he eats and drinks, and began cooking more, with pasta carbonara tops in his rotation.

“Just trying to put the right things in your body and limit the alcohol and everything like that,” McClanahan said.

He is also working on each of the four pitches in his dastardly repertoire but acknowledg­es there isn’t much help needed.

“Little, little, little, minuscule things that I think can

help a pitch play up, per se,” he said.

McClanahan — who worked two innings with 2 strikeouts and 1 hit Wednesday in the Rays’ 3-3 tie against the Braves — has shown he has the talent. To be considered among the game’s best is to maintain that level of excellence for a longer period of time — over a full 162 games, then over several seasons.

“There’s not a ton of separation — if any — between Shane and some of the game’s elite that have done it for a decade now,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “It’s just finding that consistenc­y

that you’re able to repeat, repeat, repeat.”

McClanahan is determined to do whatever work he can to get there, to constantly be striving to get better.

“Complacenc­y killed the cat,” he said. “If you’re not trying to improve, I think there’s gonna be people passing you. My favorite thing was Clayton Kershaw, won the Cy Young, best pitcher in the world, and the next year, he broke out a brand-new slider that ultimately became one of his better pitches.

“I’m just trying to always seek improvemen­t and consistenc­y and just do everything I can to be a better pitcher.”

Cash lauded McClanahan’s offseason work and suggested there may have been a residual benefit for McClanahan having been around veteran teammates such as Corey Kluber, Rich Hill and Charlie Morton as well as a tireless contempora­ry such as Tyler Glasnow.

“His work ethic really spiked,” Cash said. “You always want to see a guy that’s internally motivated. And Shane certainly is.”

Pitching coach Kyle Snyder, who works most closely with McClanahan, said the reason for the increased effort is becoming increasing­ly obvious.

“I’m pretty confident that’s largely becoming why he does what he does — wanting to be the best lefthanded starter that there is,” Snyder said.

“Part of my job is to figure out what these guys’ ‘whys’ are. Some of it’s fame, some of it’s money, some of it’s just wanting to compete against the best and be recognized by your peers, as he was to start the All-Star Game last year, etc.

“Sometimes those change a little bit in terms of the actual context of the ‘why.’ But his is becoming pretty clear that he just wants to be better.”

No question about it, McClanahan said.

“I felt like I put myself in a position this offseason to come in and make the most out of this year,” he said. “Last year I got a taste to where I wanted to be. And this year, I want to consistent­ly do that and put this team in a spot to twin. And I know a lot of other guys feel the same way.”

 ?? PHELAN M. EBENHACK / AP ?? Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Shane McClanahan has incorporat­ed into his spring training some significan­t changes to his workout routine and lifestyle designed to keep him healthier and stronger over what he hopes to be his first complete season.
PHELAN M. EBENHACK / AP Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Shane McClanahan has incorporat­ed into his spring training some significan­t changes to his workout routine and lifestyle designed to keep him healthier and stronger over what he hopes to be his first complete season.

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