Santa Cruz Sentinel

Romo chose A’s to win right away

- By Shayna Rubin

Sergio Romo garnered interest from a couple teams. At 37, the side-slinging reliever has reinvented himself as a nice complement­ary piece for a contending bullpen.

But Romo had his eye on the A’s. So when they called with a one-year, $2.5 million offer, the decision was a no-brainer. Why?

“The opportunit­y to win now wasn’t necessaril­y with every organizati­on that called me,” Romo said in a Zoom call with reporters on Saturday. “That’s why I was asking about the A’s. This organizati­on has a chance to win.”

The A’s have some “underdog” in them, Romo said. A “gritty, grindy, dirty, let’s go get that dub any way we can” ethos that drew the veteran reliever in. In simpler terms, despite projection­s that have the A’s finishing third

behind the Houston Astros and Los Angeles Angels in the American League West, Romo saw the talent and pitching need in Oakland and figured he’d be best suited there.

Plus, Romo lives nearby in San Francisco, a place he settled during his nine-year tenure with the Giants. His wife, Melinda, is 35 weeks pregnant with the couple’s fifth child. A homecoming made sense for a few reasons.

“This team wants to win and expects to win,” Romo said. “I wanted to be part of something like that. The style of play, (Bob) Melvin pulling the strings, telling us who, what, when, where and why. I wanted to be part of that. I feel I could thrive under his management and being under Emo (Scott Emerson) the pitching coach. They already have an idea of who I am and how to utilize me. They haven’t decided which way, but they have ideas and they sound fun.”

Romo’s seen a few roles in his 13-year MLB career. At his peak, he was closing World Series clinchers for the Giants. Younger A’s players know Romo as the guy who dared Triple Crown title holder Miguel Cabrera with a 89 mph fastball strike three right down the pike in a one-run, extra-inning game to seal San Francisco’s World Series sweep of the Detroit Tigers in 2012.

Romo hasn’t withered into post glory by any means. Instead, he took lessons he learned from left-handed side-armer Javier Lopez and, through the years, remastered his sweeping slider to stay effective. In year 13 with the Minnesota Twins, Romo collected 23 strikeouts with seven walks in 20 innings. He’s still missing barrels, generating weak contact and maintained a 26.4% strikeout rate in 2020. He’s averaging 27% in the Statcast era (since 2016).

Part of his continued success against both right- and left-handed hitters has been by his ability to manipulate his slider and use it on both sides of the plate.

“I throw multiple variations of it,” Romo said. “You can sit slider, but at this point in my career, it’s choosing which one. I think being able to throw it on both sides of the plate and utilize my sinker as well as I can has helped me with the breaking ball, to keep hitters off it.”

Romo is a key piece to a diverse A’s bullpen that came to fruition late in the offseason. He and fellow side-armer Adam Kolarek and closer Trevor Rosenthal add a new set of looks and velocities from both sides of the mound that complement a now-deep A’s bullpen that might have too much talent to all fit onto the active roster.

That wasn’t the case before news broke that Romo would come to Oakland, but he started a wave of moves that put an Oakland front office that was alarmingly stagnant back into contention conversati­ons.

How will Romo be used? At this point, that question seems almost irrelevant. The three-batter rule and the filled closer spot neutralize­s the concept of bullpen roles, save for the closer. Romo, like most other relievers, will be used in matchups that best suit his strengths as a slider-dependent side-armer.

“It’s such an uncomforta­ble at-bat, especially for righties,” Melvin said. “It’s the slider that plays. It’s not like guys going up there don’t know they won’t get a slider, but it’s his touch with it. How he sets it up. For a strike. Off the body.”

 ?? BRUCE KLUCKHOHN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Relief pitcher Sergio Romo celebrates after striking out the final batter in an Aug. 16 game between the Twins and Royals inn Minneapoli­s.
BRUCE KLUCKHOHN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Relief pitcher Sergio Romo celebrates after striking out the final batter in an Aug. 16 game between the Twins and Royals inn Minneapoli­s.

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