Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

2017 lesson drives Sale

Crushed by Astros, Red Sox lefty takes aim at rival Yanks

- By Jimmy Golen

BOSTON — Chris Sale waited eight years to make his first postseason start — and then another 365 days for a chance to put that memory behind him.

The Red Sox left-hander will start Game 1 of the AL Division Series against the Yankees on Friday night, one year after he was bombarded by the championsh­ip-bound Astros in his playoff debut.

He has thought about it. He has learned from it.

And he wants to make sure he doesn’t make the same mistakes again.

“Last year, obviously, I got my feet wet,” Sale said Thursday, a day before the longtime AL East rivals open their best-of-five series. “Didn’t do too well. But sometimes you learn from the bad more than the good.

“It happened. I’m not going to run away from it. I don’t think that’s the right thing to do. I’m not going to hide from it. You can Google it now, tomorrow and 100 years, and it’s going to be there. I own it. I accept it.

“And like I said, I’m going to be better. I’m going to go do everything I can to be better. That’s all I can do.”

A seven-time All-Star who was the ace of the White Sox’s staff before coming to the Red Sox before the 2017 season, Sale had never pitched for a playoff team before starting the opener of the Red Sox’s series against the Astros. He gave up seven runs in five innings. Sale pitched well in an emergency relief appearance in Game 4 but couldn’t keep the Astros from advancing.

On Friday night, Sale will face Yankees lefty J.A. Happ.

Sale is still recovering from left shoulder inflammati­on that landed him on the disabled list twice in the second half of the season and limited him to 12 innings from July 11 until Sept. 11. He made four starts down the stretch as he tried to build arm strength, but in his last outing Sept. 26, his fastball was the slowest he had thrown all season.

Sale adjusted his preparatio­n because of rain Tuesday, pushing back some of his work to Wednesday so he could pitch off a regular mound instead of in the batting cage.

Manager Alex Cora said Sale is “a full go” and that the problems with his velocity were related to his mechanics and not his health or arm strength. Either way, Sale insisted: “If I take the mound, I expect to win. Sometimes you go out there and you have your best, sometimes you don’t.

“You have to find a way with whatever you have on any given day and roll with it.”

After the Sale-Happ matchup in the opener, the Red Sox plan to throw left-hander David Price followed by righties Rick Porcello and Nathan Eovaldi. The Yankees are expected to counter with righthande­rs Masahiro Tanaka and Luis Severino followed by lefty CC Sabathia.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA/AP ?? Red Sox lefty Chris Sale will try to erase memories of last year’s debacle when he starts Friday against the Yankees.
ELISE AMENDOLA/AP Red Sox lefty Chris Sale will try to erase memories of last year’s debacle when he starts Friday against the Yankees.

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