The Mercury News Weekend

Some bullpen arms may be asked to stretch it out

How Luzardo will be re-integrated is club’s big question mark

- By Shayna Rubin srubin@bayareanew­sgroup.com

It’s still unclear when Jesús Luzardo will be cleared to enter the Coliseum. The state of his prized left arm comes to us in bits and pieces. We know Luzardo, who tested positive for the coronaviru­s before camp began, is locked away in isolation doing, what pitching coach Scott Emerson assumes, is a lot of sock throws (a baseball inside of a sock taped to your forearm).

Luzardo’s role when he returns

won’t be determined until ... he returns. At least, coaches will need to see Luzardo throw to hitters before the season begins on July 24. But, Emerson and the coaching staff started laying out options to slot Luzardo in as a cog in an unorthodox pitcher deployment for the 2020 season.

With 13 pitchers likely taking up spots on the 30-man roster to start, expect a handful of typical bullpen arms to be stretched out for three-plus innings. Some swingmen may fall more heavily into tandem/piggybacki­ng

roles. The end product: games early on could see a lot of pitching changes, and regular members of the rotation could have shorter starts.

“Each game is worth between 2.6 and 3 wins. Every win is important,” A’s pitching coach Scott Emerson said. “We’re in zone where we need guys to get stretched out. We always talk about tandems, and how many tandems you can have. Those are good for 2-to-3 days, but once you get to day four or five, your bullpen is worn out.”

Among the relievers expected to be stretched out to pitch three innings: LHP T.J. McFarland, RHP Yusmeiro Petit, RHP JB Wendelken and RHP Burch Smith.

Petit has not only experience, but also success as a starter and long man. He’s a go-to for manager Bob Melvin in nearly any leverage scenario. Stretching Petit

out for three-plus innings should be easy. Wendelken has the repertoire — 95 mph fastball, slider, curveball and changeup — to flip a lineup. Smith, who was traded from the Giants in February, has impressed with an elevated fastball that’s touched 96 mph in camp and a changeup that “deserves more credit than others have given it,” Emerson said.

“You go right to Roger Clemens. Big, Texas guy,” Emerson said of Smith. “He can pitch in any part of the game. Middle, long or start. He has enough weapons to flip lineup at least twice.”

Daniel Mengden, who is currently on the 60-day IL due to arthroscop­ic elbow surgery he had during the winter offseason, is expected to follow Chris Bassitt’s footsteps as another swingman.

Until Luzardo returns to starter form, Bassitt’s the most likely option to slide into the rotation — he will pitch in the second exhibition game against the San Francisco Giants on Tuesday — but is capable of transition­ing back to a long-relief bullpen option. It took until the 2019 season

for Bassitt to subscribe mentally and physically to the reality of an undefined job. Versatilit­y, an ability to adapt to a rotating set of pitching roles, elevates Bassitt’s value in this unorthodox season.

It took Bassitt a few years to accept his space in the pitching nebulous.

It’ll take Mengden time, too. “I’d much rather be a starter,” the right-hander said in a call on Thursday. “I think y’all know that.”

Between call-ups, options and four seasons with Oakland, Mengden has two complete games, a 4.78 ERA in 47 starts with nine relief appearance­s. With a beyondcrow­ded path toward a rotational spot, Mengden’s role on this A’s roster will need to be malleable. And, like Bassitt, he’s struggling to come to terms with that.

“Daniel will have to go through that, and you have to accept that if you want to excel,” Melvin said.

He accepts it as a sacrifice, though. And he’s talked with Bassitt about how he has to alter his routine to accommodat­e his new role.

“I always try to view it as, how can I help my team win a championsh­ip this year?” Mengden said “So, for me, it doesn’t matter what my role is. If I’m a starter, that’s great, I want to be a starter. But if my role is in the bullpen as a long guy, bridge guy, whatever you want to call it, that’s something I am willing to do, sacrifice for the team and eat innings.”

Mengden threw long toss with Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher and fellow Houston native Ross Stripling. He tailored his distinctiv­e, toe-tapping and rocking windup to be shorter, easier on the elbow.

“No more double, triple pumps or big side steps,” pitching coach Scott Emerson said.

When Luzardo returns, he may be destined for a similar fate. To start the season off, at least.

“This guy has a bright future,” Emerson said. “You’re thinking big picture. You want him to make a start every fifth day for the next 20 years.”

Luzardo made his anticipate­d debut out of the bullpen. The 21-year-old’s first recoil off a big league mound came against the

fearsome Houston Astros lineup at Minute Maid Park, he went on to give up just two runs (one homer) in 12 innings with 16 strikeouts.

Emerson says the goal is to build Luzardo up starting at two innings, 35 pitches. Then add 15 after that. If the A’s don’t have time to build him toward starts out of the gate, they may stretch him out in high-leverage situations. As the season progresses and he stretches, he’ll fall back into the rotation.

Based on intel coaching staff could collect on their arms’ progress and workload during the hiatus, Luzardo was expected to be at Frankie Montas-levels of readiness. Luzardo, 21, was throwing with right-handed starter Mike Fiers in Florida for three months.

“He’s in great shape, and he’s been doing a lot,” Emerson said of Luzardo. “The two weeks isn’t going to set him back much, because he’s athletic, he is young, he knows he’s in the right place. He’s stretching and limber and ready to go. I don’t expect him to miss too much time when he comes back.”

 ?? EZRA SHAW — GETTY IMAGES ?? Chris Bassitt, right, chatting with teammate Frankie Montas, could slide into the A’s starting rotation to open the season.
EZRA SHAW — GETTY IMAGES Chris Bassitt, right, chatting with teammate Frankie Montas, could slide into the A’s starting rotation to open the season.

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