Chattanooga Times Free Press

Boras: MLB starting pitchers are victims of ‘pitching panic’

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Scott Boras thinks an uptick in what he’s calling “pitching panic” will heat up the market for free agents and Boras clients Blake Snell and Jordan Montgomery, top-end starters still looking for work with opening day less than a month away.

“We’ve got so many starting pitchers who are now compromise­d — maybe short-term, but some long-term,” Boras said Monday. “The calls for elite starters are certainly starting to increase.”

Might be time to add St. Louis to the list after AllStar Sonny Gray exited his start against Washington on Monday in the second inning with right hamstring tightness.

Gray had a 1-1 count against Nick Senzel when he called timeout and promptly left the game. The right-hander, who finished runner-up to Yankee ace Gerrit Cole in AL Cy Young voting last year while playing for Minnesota, allowed one hit with a strikeout in 1 2/3 innings against the Nationals.

Gray was scheduled to have an MRI later Monday and declined to speak to reporters after his departure. The 34-yearold, who signed a $75 million, three-year deal with St. Louis in November, is slated to be St. Louis’ opening day starter.

CHAPMAN BACK BY THE BAY

Third baseman Matt Chapman is back where he once belonged. Well, almost.

The veteran third baseman — who spent five years as a fixture at third for the Oakland Athletics from 2017-21 — is returning to the Bay Area with San Francisco.

Chapman, who signed a $54 million, three-year deal to join the Giants, felt like he had something “special” going in Oakland early in his career before it was “ripped” out of the players’ hands by frugal ownership. That isn’t the case in San Francisco, which is trying to keep pace with the Dodgers and the reigning NL champion Arizona in the NL West.

“Getting to come back, be in an organizati­on like the Giants, a team that’s not afraid to spend, go get free agents, keep guys together and keep adding,” Chapman said. “All the things you expect a winning franchise to do.”

WHEELER CASHES IN

Zack Wheeler feels comfortabl­e in Philadelph­ia. The feeling is mutual.

The Phillies and the right-hander agreed to a $126 million, three-year deal for the 2025-27 seasons that makes Wheeler one of the highest-paid players in the majors.

“What it tells us is we think Zack is as good as anybody in baseball right now,” team president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski said. “For us right now, when we look over the last handful of years, we think Zack Wheeler is as fine a pitcher in the game of baseball.”

The 33-year-old Wheeler is 43-25 with a 3.06 ERA in three seasons with Philadelph­ia and 87-63 with a 3.49 ERA in nine years with the Phillies and the Mets. It comes with a year left on the five-year, $118 million he signed to join Philadelph­ia before the 2021 season.

“I think it works out for me, I think it works out for the team,” Wheeler said. “I’d rather have it now than go to free agency and see what happens.”

VLADDY GOES DEEP, REALLY DEEP

Toronto Blue Jays slugger Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit his first home run of spring training, taking a 93 mph inside fastball from Philadelph­ia’s Nick Nelson in the first inning and turning it into a 438-foot drive over the batter’s eye at TD Park.

The 24-year-old Guerrero, who set a record in February by winning a $19.9 million salary arbitratio­n case against the Blue Jays, is hitting .462 through five games.

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