Houston Chronicle Sunday

Phillies call up former No. 1 pick Appel

- By Chandler Rome chander.rome@chron.com twitter.com/chandler_rome

NEW YORK — Mark Appel is a major leaguer.

Nine years after the Astros selected Appel with the first overall pick in the draft, the Houston native received his first call-up late Friday night as a COVID-19 replacemen­t player for the Philadelph­ia Phillies.

“Completely overwhelme­d. I have so many thoughts I want to share but can’t find the words, so I’ll just say this: I’m thankful,” Appel tweeted on Saturday morning. “Today, I get to play a game I love as a Major League Baseball player.”

Appel stepped away from baseball in 2018 due to numerous injuries. He returned to the Phillies organizati­on last season in a comeback attempt. The righthande­r had a 1.61

ERA and 0.929 WHIP in 28 innings for Class AA Lehigh Valley before his promotion.

The Astros packaged Appel with four other prospects to acquire closer Ken Giles from Philadelph­ia in December 2015. The trade ended Appel’s tumultuous tenure within the Astros organizati­on, one during which he never actualized the astronomic­al expectatio­ns enveloping him.

Signed by Houston for $6.35 million in 2013, Appel reached Class AAA Fresno in 2015, where he finished with a 4.48 ERA in 681⁄3 innings. He spent parts of three more seasons in the Phillies system before announcing his retirement in 2018, citing injuries and burnout.

Appel opened a sandwich shop in Houston during his retirement, which he officially termed an “indefinite break” at the time.

McCullers throws batting practice

Lance McCullers Jr. threw his first live batting practice session of the season on Saturday, continuing his slow journey back from a strained flexor tendon.

McCullers threw around 20 pitches to Chas McCormick and Jeremy Peña prior to the Astros’ game at Yankee Stadium. Both Peña and McCormick put multiple balls in play — Peña hit two to the warning track — but the results of the simulated at-bats mattered little.

“It was good. Obviously it was the first time (facing hitters), first time I warmed up in the bullpen,” McCullers said. “I was up to 93 (mph) and that’s a really good sign because the velo is steadily increasing on its own. I’m not really having to go get it or anything like that, so that’s a good thing.”

As has been standard in the last few weeks, McCullers threw primarily sinkers, cutters and changeups. He did deviate from his plan and spin one slider, which he acknowledg­ed is a major hurdle he must clear.

“I’ve been throwing them in catch and throwing a couple in the (bullpen) here and there. I threw some today and they felt pretty good, coming off my fingers well. I’ve been throwing curveballs for a couple weeks now. I think the biggest hurdle for me to get over is going to be the slider — not physically, more mentally probably.”

McCullers is scheduled to throw several more live batting practice sessions and is not close to a minor league rehab assignment. A concrete timetable for his return is unclear.

Manea’s bat stays hot in Sugar Land

Scott Manea came into Saturday’s game with a hot bat against the Tacoma Rainiers, hitting .417 through 11 games this season.

He pushed the Sugar Land Space Cowboys past Tacoma in a 9-8 win at Constellat­ion Field, going 3-for-3 with a double, walk and two RBIs.

The Space Cowboys scored a pair of key insurance runs in the eighth when Manea came across to score on a double play and Korey Lee supplied an RBI single.

Manea’s offensive output backed Space Cowboys starter Peter Solomon, who struck out six batters across a seasonhigh six innings of work.

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 ?? Noah K. Murray/Associated Press ?? Astros first baseman J.J. Matijevic breaks open a scoreless game with a home run off the Yankees’ Gerrit Cole in the seventh inning on Saturday.
Noah K. Murray/Associated Press Astros first baseman J.J. Matijevic breaks open a scoreless game with a home run off the Yankees’ Gerrit Cole in the seventh inning on Saturday.

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