The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Sox trying to stay the course amid injury, illness

- ByNoah Trister

The season is only a week old, and already the Boston Red Sox have faced quite a bit of adversity.

It’s hard enough to deal with whatever baseball-related injuries pop up each year, but Boston has also had to worry about the flu, which has been making its way through the roster over the past few days. Every game brings new questions about who manager John Farrell will be able to put on the field.

Hanley Ramirez missed the last three games, and Mookie Betts was also sick, missing three games before returning in Sunday’s win at Detroit. Reliever Robbie Ross is on the disabled list because of the flu. Utilityman­BrockHolt and reliever Joe Kelly have also been unavailabl­e at times.

“It’s not like we could go home and quit. We’ve got games to play,” secondbase­man Dustin Pedroia said. “We’ve got a job to do, and we’ll try to do it as best we can.”

The Red Sox will attempt to salvage a split of a fourgame series at Detroit when they send Chris Sale to the moundMonda­y against Justin Verlander. Boston will be without outfielder Jackie Bradley Jr. in that game after he hurt his knee Saturday. It’s not clear how much time he’ll miss, but even after all their illnesses run their course, the Red Sox may not be at full strength for a while. David Price is still working his way back from a left elbow strain.

The defending AL East champions have persevered. The Red Sox beat the Tigers 7-5 on Sunday, with reliever Matt Barnes earning the win with two scoreless innings in his first game back from the bereavemen­t list. Shortstop Xander Bogaerts has also been on the bereavemen­t list.

Boston returns home for a six-game stand against Bal- timore and Tampa Bay that starts Tuesday night.

Here are a few other developmen­ts from around baseball:

TURNAROUND

Last season, the Minnesota Twins began the season 0-9. They’re 5-1 so far in 2017— the best record in the American League. Cleveland looks like the clear favorite in the AL Central, but it’s hard to identify the top challenger at this point, and the Twins have an early chance to state their case.

TURNING HIM LOOSE

Houston’s Chris Devenski finished fourth in the AL Rookie of the Year race last season, posting a 2.16 ERA in 108 1/3 innings. He made five starts and 43 relief appearance­s.

Devenski has come out of the bullpen in his only two appearance­s this season, but he threw four innings each time, with the Astros clearly trying to take advantage of his ability to handle longer outings. On Wednesday against Seattle, he entered in a tie game in the eighth and kept things even, striking out seven and holding the Mariners without a hit. Houston eventually won in 13 innings.

After three days off, Devenski entered in the ninth Sunday with the Astros and Royals tied at 3. The righthande­r allowed a solo homer to Brandon Moss, but after Houston tied it in the bottom of the inning, Devenski stayed on the mound for the Astros in the 10th, 11th and 12th, eventually finishing with seven strikeouts again and getting the win when Evan Gattis drew a game-winning walk with the bases loaded in the bottom of the 12th.

Andrew Miller’s postseason for Cleveland showed how valuable a reliever can be when he’s not constraine­d by a rigid role. Devenski’s workload and effectiven­ess will be worth watching.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Boston Red Sox third base coach Brian Butterfiel­d greets outfielder Mookie Betts after the team’s 7-5win over the Detroit Tigers in a baseball game, Sunday in Detroit.
CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Boston Red Sox third base coach Brian Butterfiel­d greets outfielder Mookie Betts after the team’s 7-5win over the Detroit Tigers in a baseball game, Sunday in Detroit.

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