Hartford Courant (Sunday)

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Meet baseball’s unlikely breakout stars of the 2021 season

- By Bill Madden

Of all the injuries inflicting baseball this year — and heaven knows there’s already been an unduly amount of them — perhaps the most devastatin­g and dumbest was the broken hand suffered by Braves rookie right-handed starter Huascar Ynoa last Sunday.

Until venting his frustratio­n over a rare bad outing by punching out a dugout bench and fracturing his right hand, the 22-year-old Ynoa had been among a handful of unlikely breakout stars this young season, carrying the Braves’ rotation — decimated by injuries to Mike Soroka (Achilles, shoulder) and Drew Smyly (forearm) and ineffectiv­eness of Max Fried — with four wins and a 3.02 ERA through his first seven starts.

His fastball regularly registerin­g in the high 90s, Ynoa had 50 strikeouts and only 11 walks in 44.2 innings before “punching” out for what is likely to be at least two months.

Only time will tell if Ynoa can regain his dominance when he comes back. He’s been part of a half dozen equally surprising breakout stars — the White Sox’s Yermin Mercedes and Carlos Rodon, Red Sox righty starter Nick Pivetta, Cardinals closer Alex Reyes and Rangers center fielder Adolis Garcia — who have made significan­t contributi­ons to their teams’ seasons.

The Red Sox went into spring training with no idea what their starting rotation was going to look like after Nathan Eovaldi and hopefully a physically recovered Eduardo Rodriguez. They certainly weren’t sure of what they had in Pivetta, the 28-yearold right-hander who’d struggled mightily in four years with the Phillies before being traded to Boston in August 2020 for relief pitchers Brandon Workman and Heath Hembree. Going into the weekend, Pivetta, who began the season as a back-end rotation guy, has been the Red Sox’s most effective starter (5-0, 3.59 ERA, 47.2 IP), a success even he has been hard-pressed to explain other than opportunit­y, grit and determinat­ion.

When the White Sox lost two of their three best hitters, Eloy Jimenez and Luis Robert, for what will be most of the season, there was every reason to believe their chances of getting their 85-year-old owner Jerry Reinsdorf to the World Series were doomed. Yet, here they are atop the AL Central with one of the best records in baseball. A lot of that has had to do with Rodon, who came to spring training just hoping to pitch his way onto the team, and Mercedes, who at the end of spring training wasn’t even supposed to be part of the team.

Rodon is an especially inspiring success story. The No. 3 overall pick in the 2014 MLB draft, his career with the White Sox was derailed by injuries prompting the Sox to non-tender him last winter. After striking out 13 Yankees over six scoreless innings Friday, Rodon, 5-1, has a 1.27 ERA and 0.80 WHIP, including a no-hitter April 14 against the Indians so far.

As for Mercedes, a 28-year-old career minor leaguer whom the White Sox acquired in the 2017 Rule 5 Draft from the Orioles, he was destined for a return trip to Triple-A until the injuries to Jimenez and Robert and has done his best to make up for a lot of the lost offense, leading the majors in batting (.364 as of Saturday) with six homers and 25 RBI as the Sox DH.

Down in Texas, nothing has gone very well this season for the rebuilding Rangers, who have been no-hit twice and are very likely to finish last in the AL West for the third time in four years. Their one bright spot, unlikely as it may have seemed in spring training, has been 28-year-old Cuban center fielder Garcia, who as of Saturday was leading the team in batting (.291), OPS (.913), homers (12) and RBI (35). Though he ranked fifth in the AL in hard hit balls rate, one red flag that the pitchers might eventually start to neutralize him is the fact that he’s struck out 28.1% of the time as opposed to walking just 5.8%.

Despite having only appeared in 32 major league games prior to this season, Cardinals righthande­r closer Reyes, who entered the weekend with an 0.39 ERA, 31 K in 23 innings and 13-for-13 in saves, can not exactly be described as a surprise, if only because when he did pitch in brief stints in 2016 and 2020, he was light’s out dominant. Unfortunat­ely, in between, he battled a series of injuries including Tommy John surgery and another surgery for a torn lat muscle.

 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? White Sox designated hitter Yermin Mercedes goofs around before a game against the Royals at Guaranteed Rate Field in Chicago on May 16.
BRIAN CASSELLA/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE White Sox designated hitter Yermin Mercedes goofs around before a game against the Royals at Guaranteed Rate Field in Chicago on May 16.
 ?? CHARLES KRUPA/AP ?? Red Sox relief pitcher Nick Pivetta throws during a May 4 game at Fenway Park in Boston.
CHARLES KRUPA/AP Red Sox relief pitcher Nick Pivetta throws during a May 4 game at Fenway Park in Boston.

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