The Record (Troy, NY)

Weber

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starting four at this point would include Eduardo Rodriguez, Nathan Eovaldi, Martin Perez and Weber.

“It is really about trusting my stuff and I started throwing that cutter and trusting that,” said Weber. “It’s a compliment­ary pitch, it’s off my sinker and it compliment­s that and it just adds another piece that makes me effective.

“I think that has upped my performanc­e and having the ability to throw five pitches for strikes, that correlates going deep into games and obviously that’s what a starter does.

“My stuff plays better as a starter than a reliever and I’ve started focusing on the importance of every single pitch. Every pitch matters. I told myself that when spring training started and that’s myself now.”

The Red Sox signed Weber to a minor league contract on Dec. 20, 2018. He played in 18 games last season with three starts on separate call-ups from Pawtucket. He finished the season 2- 4 with a 5.09

ERA over 40 innings, with 29 strikeouts.

Weber broke into the major leagues with Atlanta in 2015 and had brief stays with Seattle (2017) and Tampa (2018). He is 3- 9 with a 5.04 ERA in 42 games with 11 starts and 114.1 innings pitched.

Weber caught the attention of Red Sox first-year manager Ron Roenicke with three solid efforts in Fort Myers before MLB shut down due to the global COVID-19 pandemic. Weber was 1- 0 in three appearance­s over nine innings and he did not give up an earned run.

“It’s hard to say with him and last year was the first time I got to see him,” said Roenicke. “I like him because he goes right after hitters and you know what you are going to get.

“He moves the ball in and out and he’s got command and he throws strikes. He’s capable of going through some really good lineups with consistenc­y trying to get comfortabl­e in the big leagues.”

Weber’s resume reads like a career minor league pitcher, and his stopovers read like a geography lesson. Despite all the moving around and the infrequent call-ups from Triple A, Weber never gave up hope of collecting a steady check in the bigs.

“I pitched good in the minors and when I was called up, I thought I pitched good but there were some bad games here and there,” said Weber. “I knew if I keep doing what I’m doing and what I’ve been doing and hone in and get sharper.”

On Saturday, Weber took the mound for the top of the first with Kevin Plawecki behind the plate. He got the first two batters on a liner to center and a fly to left. After giving up a single, Weber caught Michael Chavis looking to end the frame.

After a leadoff single in the top of the second, Weber caught a break when the bases were cleared on a 4- 6-3 double play followed by a pop to second.

“I had a good sinkerslid­er combo around the plate and a good enough change up to keep the guessing,” said Weber. “The cutter was good enough to keep them off balance, especially the lefties coming in behind.”

Things went a little south from there, as Weber gave up two hits and a run in the third, then three straight base hits in a rocky fourth.

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