The Palm Beach Post

Wainwright throws minor leaguer a gift

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St. Louis pitcher Ryan Sherriff thought clubhouse prankster Adam Wainwright was taking him for a ride. Turns out he was about to be given one.

When the Cardinals traveling secretary asked Sherriff for his driver’s license, the 26-year-old left-hander thought someone was trying to mock his license photo, which still featured a picture from his high school days.

Sherriff spent last season at Triple-A Memphis and has an outside change at making the big league roster. He couldn’t afford to ship his car from California to Florida for spring training, so he rented a house about 10 minutes away. He’s been walking to camp, to the store and pretty much everywhere else this spring. There was no need for a license.

Three times Wainwright drove past Sherriff on his way to the ballpark. After offering Sherriff a bicycle, which the reliever appreciati­vely declined, Wainwright asked traveling secretary C.J. Cherre to get Sheriff a rented car. Wainwright took care of the bill.

“That’s the kind of thing that happened to me when I was younger,” Wainwright said. “I remember I wore a couple of tired collared shirts in a row to the field and Mark Mulder bought me a whole box of collared shirts.”

To rent the car, Cherre needed Sherriff ’s license. The young pitcher began to suspect something was up.

“So I run into Waino in the dugout I’m like, ‘Hey, man, are you pulling a prank on me with my ID?’” Sherriff said. “He grabs me by the shoulder. He’s just like, ‘Yeah, you better watch out.’”

A few hours later, Sherriff received a call from Cardinals clubhouse man Ernie Moore. The keys to a Nissan Altima were waiting for Sherriff in his locker.

“I got out of my house, I started walking,” he said. “I called my mom. I started crying because it’s the nicest thing anyone’s ever done for me.”

Knowing that Wainwright favored Chick-fil-A, sweet iced tea and barbecue sauce, Sherriff immediatel­y drove to the fast-food restaurant to purchase a gift card and to a supermarke­t to pick up some tea and sauce. He left it in Wainwright’s locker along with a thank-you card.

“He nailed the thank-you gift,” Wainwright said. “That’s the best thank-you gift I’ve ever had.”

A few hours after Wainwright tossed Sherriff a curveball with the new wheels, he rediscover­ed his own.

Last season was Wainwright’s first full year since tearing his Achilles tendon in 2015. He struggled with the feel of what was once a devastatin­g curveball. He went 13-9 after posting 39 wins over the previous two seasons.

This week, after watching his own instructio­nal internet video on how to throw a curve, Wainwright realized his grip had shifted slightly. The old grip brought back the old hook.

“I’ve got my curve ball back,” the three-time All-Star said after Thursday’s outing, his first of the spring. “It is so great to have it back.”

Wainwright allowed a leadoff homer to Dansby Swanson and a t wo-run shot to Adam Walker in the first inning of the Cardinals’ 9-4 victory over Atlanta. But Wainwright also struck out three of the 16 Atlanta batters who struck out Thursday — t wice on curveballs.

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