Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

AROUND THE HORN

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■ Athletics: Bench coach Ryan Christenso­n has apologized for raising his arm during a postgame celebratio­n in what looked like a Nazi salute. Christenso­n made the gesture while greeting closer Liam Hendriks following the A’s 6-4 win over the Texas Rangers on Thursday. Hendriks immediatel­y pushed Christenso­n’s arm down and cameras then showed him laughing and briefly raising his arm a second time. Christenso­n faced criticism after video of the gesture circulated on social media. “I made a mistake and will not deny it,” Christenso­n said in a statement issued through the team. “Today in the dugout I greeted players with a gesture that was offensive. In the world today of COVID, I adapted our elbow bump, which we do after wins, to create some distance with the players. My gesture unintentio­nally resulted in a racist and horrible salute that I do not believe in. What I did is unacceptab­le and I deeply apologize.”

■ Indians: Hitting coach Ty Van Burkleo has opted out of the 2020 season due to concerns about contractin­g the coronaviru­s. Team President Chris Antonetti said Friday that Van Burkelo had been contemplat­ing his departure for some time because of a personal high-risk condition and for his family. The Van Burkleos have a special needs child. Antonetti said the challenges of traveling and the lack of room in road ballparks may have been the tipping point for the 57-year-old Van Burkleo, who is in his eighth season with the club. He had been facing criticism over Cleveland’s early offensive strugglele­nges,” he said.

■ Marlins: Manager Don Mattingly was talking about this week’s doublehead­er sweep at Baltimore that involved a parade of relievers, including several newcomers rescued from unemployme­nt, and after naming three of them he drew a blank. “I’ve got to remember who all we used,” Mattingly said. “Who else pitched today? I don’t know.” For the Marlins, this season has been a bit of a blur. It was halted for eight days because of a coronaviru­s outbreak that sidelined more than half the team, and four games into the resumption of play, there’s cause for eye-rubbing. The Marlins are in first place in August, a first for the franchise. In fact, at 6-1 they have the best record in baseball, staging a one-year turnaround not seen since the 1899 St. Louis Perfectos.

■ Nationals: World Series MVP Stephen Strasburg is scheduled to make his season debut on Sunday against the Orioles after being sidelined by a nerve problem in his pitching hand. Strasburg missed what would have been his first two appearance­s of 2020 after making all 33 starts last year and then becoming the first pitcher to finish a postseason with a 5-0 record. “The tingling in his thumb is gone, and that’s a good sign. We watched him and he’s throwing some really good bullpens. That was the big thing for me: Nothing in his mechanics has changed. Everything’s good,” manager Dave Martinez said Friday before Washington’s series opener against visiting Baltimore.

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