Boston Herald

Bello not in ‘any pain’ amid brief shutdown

- By Gabrielle Starr gstarr@bostonhera­ld.com

FORT MYERS, Fla. — Less than 24 hours after Cora announced that Brayan Bello is shut down for the weekend with forearm soreness, the young pitcher offered an update of his own.

Through translator Carlos Villoria Benítez, Bello explained, “I didn’t feel any pain. I just felt tight, and I really didn’t want to force it.”

And there’s absolutely no reason to force it when it’s the first week of spring training, he’s competing for a spot in the rotation, and

Pedro Martinez thinks he can win a Cy Young award one day.

As of Friday, the Red Sox weren’t planning on having any imaging done, and Cora anticipate­d that Bello would resume his throwing program on Monday.

Red Sox lifers

In the last three years, the Red Sox parted ways with two players who could’ve been Red Sox for life, and kept one. Mookie Betts and Xander Bogaerts are gone, Rafael Devers is here to stay. How many other homegrown players will follow the latter?

It was on Cora’s mind when he asked Dustin Pedroia to come to Fort Myers for the weekend. Even though Pedroia’s career was cut short, he’s a Red Sox lifer, from the 2004 draft until what turned out to be his final game in 2019. In today’s game, playing for one franchise from start to finish is rare, and doing so from the draft even more so.

“This whole thing about playing with one franchise, I believe the only guy that is gonna do here is Raffy (Devers) probably. Well, the young guys maybe, but for sure it’s Raffy.”

How much will Bogaerts’ absence be felt this year?

“Yeah, he’s been here for a while,” Pedroia said, “But that’s how the sport is, you know, any sport. You know, you lose guys, or guys go somewhere else. That doesn’t mean it’s the end of the world. You gotta find a way to, somebody to fill that role and play.”

Blast from the past

Jose Canseco wasn’t with the Red Sox for very long, but he’s still no fan of Yankees. Two, in particular, are frequently mentioned in his eclectic tweets: Alex ‘ARod’ Rodriguez and Aaron Judge.

Of his 17-year major league career, Canseco only spent the ’95 and ’96 seasons in Boston. By his own admission, it was a powerful career tainted by performanc­e-enhancing substances.

Nowadays, he’s frequently online, and recently, has challenged Judge to a hitting contest. “Also Ryan judge I doubt you could even come close to hitting a softball further than I can I may even be able to hit a baseball further than you can,” Canseco wrote.

Twitter users got a kick out of the misnomer, especially since it came on the heels of MLB Network contributo­r Jon Heyman tweeting that ‘Arson Judge’ was signing with the Giants in December.

Messing with the kid

Speaking of misnomers, the Red Sox held an Open House at JetBlue Park on Saturday, welcoming fans for a day of face-painting, balloon animals, inflatable slides in the outfield, $1 hot dogs, and player autographs.

According to Chris Henrique of Beyond the Monster, Triston Casas had a little fun of his own, telling a fan who asked for his autograph but didn’t know his last name, that his name was Dalbec.

 ?? MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD ?? Pitcher Brayan Bello of the Boston Red Sox screams out after striking out Bo Bichette of the Toronto Blue Jays during the fourth inning of an Aug. 24, 2022 game at Fenway Park.
MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD Pitcher Brayan Bello of the Boston Red Sox screams out after striking out Bo Bichette of the Toronto Blue Jays during the fourth inning of an Aug. 24, 2022 game at Fenway Park.

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