East Bay Times

White Sox ecstatic that Hendriks is cancer-free, now await return

- By LaMond Pope

Andrew Vaughn sent Liam Hendriks a text as soon as he heard the Chicago White Sox closer was cancer-free.

“(I) said, `When does the rehab assignment start?'” the White Sox first baseman and former Cal standout said last week. “He replied, `As soon as I get my first live BP and it's on.' That's pretty cool.”

Hendriks' announceme­nt Thursday on Instagram brought smiles throughout the White Sox clubhouse.

“Unbelievab­le,” pitching coach Ethan Katz said. “A really exciting time just to hear that he's in a really good spot health-wise and, obviously, from a team perspectiv­e, we're able to know that he's going to be back. So it's very exciting.”

Hendriks, who pitched for the A's from 2016 to 2020, began treatment in January for non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

Monday, White Sox manager Pedro Grifol said Hendriks is in Arizona, but could be in Chicago sometime during the team's upcoming homestand for a visit, “before he goes out and starts competing,”

Katz said, “Baseball really wasn't on my mind, but you always hope that he's going to be OK and can be back because that's what he loves to do. But when you get the

news, the first thing you think of is his life. Is he going to get through this? Is he going to have a normal life?”

“He's a great presence in our clubhouse, a great presence in our bullpen. It's hard to replace Liam Hendriks as a person and a player, so having him around is a huge asset.”

Vaughn, who sat near Hendriks in the home clubhouse at Guaranteed Rate Field the last two seasons, joked, “Besides the Lego collection and the whole mess he has in the corner, Liam is a great guy.

“I see him all offseason. We live 10 minutes from each other in Scottsdale. It's devastatin­g at first but now it's almost like a thing of the past.

“He's a great person through and through. It's so funny knowing him on and off the field because he's two completely different people. When he comes in the ninth inning, it's all business. He's someone you don't want to face. Off the field, he's as nice as can be.”

As for the on-field impact, Hendriks had 75 saves in his first two seasons with the Sox, who signed the closer to a three-year, $54 million contract in January 2021.

“You're adding your closer, two-time relief pitcher of the year,” Grifol said last week. “It would mean anything to any ballclub. Certainly would lengthen our bullpen out.”

Grifol and Katz said a plan is in place for Hendriks' next baseball steps.

“In spring training when he wanted to throw and do things, I really was more focused on, like, are you OK to do this? Is this something that's not going to (lead to) any setbacks for yourself? That's where my mind was,” Katz said. “But now that he actually did all those things, it was actually a blessing in disguise because he did so much that now it speeds up everything else. He's not starting from ground zero.

“Everything is laid out. Now he just has to hit all those milestones and get him back and get his presence around here and do a couple of rehab assignment­s and we'll get him back as soon as he finishes that program.”

Grifol compared the current phase to “the start of his spring training.”

“The only thing I can tell you is that through this process he's kept throwing,” Grifol said. “I've actually seen four or five of those sessions in spring training and his velocity maybe wasn't exactly where he wanted it, but his effort, his arm, the way it worked, just his competitiv­eness, all that was there. And so he's not starting from scratch. He's been working.”

Baseball wasn't on Grifol's mind last week with the news on Hendriks.

“What lifts my spirit is the fact that he's cancer-free,” Grifol said. “Has nothing to do with baseball. That was the most important thing for me, for us, for this organizati­on, for every single fan. This is a hell of a lot bigger than baseball.

“And now the fact that he's going to start ramping it up, again, it will lift anybody's spirit. But it has nothing to do with our record, it has everything to do with him and him getting back to doing what he loves and what he does best. We're all here (with) open arms waiting for him to get here whenever he's ready.”

 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA — CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? The White Sox's Liam Hendriks is cancer-free after treatment for non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
BRIAN CASSELLA — CHICAGO TRIBUNE The White Sox's Liam Hendriks is cancer-free after treatment for non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

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