Chicago Sun-Times

Players keep edge amid uncertaint­y

- Jorge L. Ortiz @ jorgelorti­z USA TODAY Sports

To get a sense for the distinct uncertaint­y many players experience at this time of year, just ask Jaime Garcia— if you can track him down.

The veteran left- handed pitcher made his first start for the Minnesota Twins in Oakland on Friday, four days after joining the club in a trade with the Atlanta Braves. Garcia was granted permission to travel back to Atlanta on Saturday to gather his belongings, then was supposed to rejoin the Twins in Minneapoli­s when they returned from their West Coast trip.

Except Garcia’s route took a detour when the Twins sent him to the New York Yankees for two minor league pitchers in a deal completed Saturday.

So a player who spent his first 12 seasons as a pro with the same organizati­on — the St. Louis Cardinals drafted him in 2005 — was a member of three clubs in the same week. How’s that for career stability? “Unless we bring him back, he’ll go down as one of the few undefeated pitchers in Twins history,” quipped manager Paul Molitor, who watched Garcia throw 6 2/3 innings of three- run ball in Friday’s win vs. the Oakland Athletics.

Had he hung around Oakland long enough, Garcia might have been able to share travel advice with Athletics righthande­r Sonny Gray, one of the prize catches on the trade market along with Texas Rangers starter Yu Darvish and a number of relievers headlined by lefthander­s Zach Britton, Brad Hand and Justin Wilson. Gray, who had his scheduled start Sunday pushed back to Monday after the 4 p. m. ET non- waiver trade deadline, is particular­ly coveted because he will be under team control through the 2019 season. The Yankees are regarded as Gray’s strongest suitors.

The trade rumors swirling around him have done little to hamper Gray’s performanc­e, another appealing trait about the 27- year- old staff ace. After overcoming an early- season shoulder injury and inconsiste­ncy, Gray has recorded a 1.37 ERA while holding hitters to a .164 batting average over his last six starts.

“You’re not stupid. You kind of know what’s going on,” Gray told USA TODAY Sports about the trade talk. “I’ve been here since 2013. You get an understand­ing of the way this place works, but at the same time, I’ve seen it for so many guys. There’s nothing you can do except for going out there and pitching.”

Molitor is hoping his club takes a similar attitude after seemingly changing course in less than a week.

The Twins were widely considered to be rebuilding after losing a Minnesota-record 103 games last year. Instead, they sat atop the American League Central through mid- June and entered the All-Star break 2½ games back, raising the prospect of becoming buyers instead of sellers at the deadline.

Minnesota went for it, dealing for Garcia to fortify its rotation, but then flipped him after losing four of five to drop to seven games back in the Central as the division- leading Cleveland Indians and the Kansas City Royals surged behind nine- game winning streaks.

 ?? NICK TURCHIARO, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Athletics right- handed pitcher Sonny Gray is one of the most- coveted players at the trade deadlineMo­nday.
NICK TURCHIARO, USA TODAY SPORTS Athletics right- handed pitcher Sonny Gray is one of the most- coveted players at the trade deadlineMo­nday.

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