The Denver Post

BETTIS RETURNS TO THE MOUND, PITCHES SEVEN SHUTOUT INNINGS

- By Nick Groke

Cancer sneaked up on Chad Bettis twice — first in November, when a tumor appeared he could not explain, then again in February, when blood cells he could not see threatened his life. Baseball never vanished. He just looked in the other direction.

By Monday morning, he could no longer ignore the onrush of his first game since last September. The thought of pitching again knocked him in the face.

“It crept in when I woke up,” Bettis said, his eyes swelling. “Just thinking about everything that happened, everything my family went through. I was holding back tears until the game started.”

His time arrived Monday night at Coors Field as the Rockies started a vital four-game series against the Atlanta Braves with a 3-0 victory. The Rockies’ veteran right-hander, the senior member of a pitching rotation with its sights set on the postseason, returned to pitch for the first time this season, and with flair, throwing seven scoreless innings and allowing just six hits.

Bettis got a no-decision for his efforts, departing a 0-0 game. But Colorado finally got on the board in the eighth, thanks to Charlie Blackmon’s leadoff triple. An intentiona­l walk, a single by Parra that scored Black-

mon, and a two-run single by Carlos Gonzalez gave the Rockies a 3-0 lead.

The game, though, belonged to Bettis. After surgery to remove testicular cancer in December and nine weeks of chemothera­py in the spring while Colorado started its season on a tear, after his hair fell out and medicine racked his body and exhausted his strength, Bettis was back on a pitching mound as though he had never left.

“What he went through is way more important than baseball. But he loves the game. That’s why he’s back,” Rockies all-star third baseman Nolan Arenado said. “To go through that and now he’s here to help us with a playoff run, it’s a big deal.”

When Bettis walked in from the bullpen toward the Rockies dugout before his first pitch, a wave of applause followed him down the right-field line. This is the man who led the Rockies in victories (14) and innings pitched (186) last season, the veteran member of a staff that otherwise averages a green age of 24 years, with three rookies. He is the pitcher who guided 24-year-old right-hander Jeff Hoffman through his first profession­al hurdle late in spring training, the sage who taught Jon Gray to throw a curveball.

And after beating cancer, Coors Field and its acres of outfield suddenly seemed smaller with Bettis on the mound.

His team seemed especially amped. After Ender Inciarte’s line drive to lead off the game skipped past Parra in left field, Parra tagteamed a relay throw with shortstop Trevor Story to throw out the runner trying to stretch an insidethe-park home run.

“I went from incredibly high to ‘Oh, no,’ ” Bettis said. “But Parra ended up making a spectacula­r play. To see guys give their 100 percent effort for me is all I can ask for.”

Their defense extended around Coors Field. DJ LeMahieu slid on his knees to snare Danny Santana’s hot shot toward right field in the fourth and threw him out to end the inning and save a run.

In the fifth, Bettis kept Dansby Swanson at second base after a oneout double.

Bettis caught Nick Markakis looking at an 84 mph changeup to end a three-up, three-down sixth inning with a strikeout.

Bettis’ comeback was watched by players and fans throughout the majors. After Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Jameson Taillon underwent surgery to remove testicular cancer on May 8, while Bettis was recovering from chemothera­py, the Rockies pitcher sent Taillon a text message of encouragem­ent.

When Taillon heard Bettis was attempting to pitch again this season — considered a longshot when he left spring training — Taillon never blanched at the idea. And he promised to tune in.

“A lot of people saw that and thought, ‘Oh, that’s cool. He wants to come back. That’s inspiratio­nal, but no chance,’ ” Taillon said. “It gave me chills. I texted him. I was like, ‘I’m looking forward to seeing you on a mound this year. Not if or when or I hope it happens, I’m looking forward to the day you pitch this season, 2017.’ ”

After Bettis gave up a leadoff double to Kurt Suzuki in the seventh inning, he dug for more. Suzuki scampered to third on a sacrifice bunt. With the go-ahead run 90 feet away, Bettis forced Ozzie Albies and Swanson to fly out to Charlie Blackmon in center. Suzuki never threatened.

“I don’t think I could have pitched any better,” Bettis said. He navigated a hug line through the dugout between innings. Then manager Bud Black sat next to him on the bench. They shared few words.

“I wanted him to enjoy what was going on in the moment,” Black said. “Just two guys looking at each other. And I expressed how well he threw.”

 ?? John Leyba, The Denver Post ?? Rockies starting pitcher Chad Bettis takes the mound in the first inning against the Atlanta Braves on Monday night at Coors Field in his first game back from cancer treatment. He pitched superbly and got great defense behind him, going seven shutout...
John Leyba, The Denver Post Rockies starting pitcher Chad Bettis takes the mound in the first inning against the Atlanta Braves on Monday night at Coors Field in his first game back from cancer treatment. He pitched superbly and got great defense behind him, going seven shutout...
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 ??  ?? Chad Bettis delivers Monday night at Coors Field in his first major-league game of the season.
Chad Bettis delivers Monday night at Coors Field in his first major-league game of the season.

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