The Denver Post

Texas shooting hits “close to home” for Rays pitcher

- By Dick Scanlon

ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. » The mass school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, was especially disturbing for Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Brooks Raley.

The small community of about 16,000 people west of San Antonio is the left-hander’s hometown, he attended school in the building where the shooting occurred, and his parents and a brother still reside there.

“It’s a pretty small town,” Raley said Wednesday. “News travels fast. My family is still there, my brother lives there, and his wife and daughter. So it hits close to home.”

Raley, 33, was in the Rays’ clubhouse at Tropicana Field less than an hour before a game against the Miami Marlins when he learned 19 children and two adults had been gunned down at his old school.

While making it clear he did not want to discuss any political implicatio­ns of Tuesday’s shooting, Raley acknowledg­ed the news is difficult to digest.

“I was just sitting in here and heard something and didn’t really follow up because we were about 40 minutes before the game. I got to talk to my parents, just to get a little bit of background and get as much informatio­n as you can,” he said.

“I did go to that school. I walked those halls, so I can imagine what they experience each day, and I’m feeling for that community,” Raley added. “It’s small and a close-knit community, so it’s obviously tough. I don’t know if there’s anything I can do. It’s going to take time.”

Raley, a two-sport star at Uvalde High School, has not lived in his hometown since heading off to college at Texas A&M, where he was drafted by the Chicago Cubs in 2009. He currently resides in College Station, Texas, with his wife, Rachel, and their three daughters.

“It’s the biggest city west of San Antonio,” he said of his hometown. “I mean, we’ve got an H&B and a Walmart and a couple fast-food joints. Not a whole lot there.”

His hesitancy to discuss the tragedy publicly is partly due to all the unanswered questions, Raley said.

“It’s just a tragedy. Obviously growing up there and going to that school, it kind of hits home,” the pitcher said. “Having young children myself, you just feel for those families, and you pray for them and your thoughts are with them.”

Braves’ Acuña scratched with right quadriceps tightness.

ATLANTA » Braves right fielder Ronald Acuña Jr. was scratched from Atlanta’s lineup Wednesday with right quadriceps tightness.

The team announced about 90 minutes before first pitch against Philadelph­ia that Acuña would sit. He awoke feeling sore and tested out his leg by running on the field before deciding to skip the game.

Acuña is hitting .292 with two homers, eight RBIS and eight stolen bases in 65 at-bats since returning from reconstruc­tive right knee surgery April 28.

Banged-up Yankees add Stanton, Loáisiga to injured list.

NEW YORK » Yankees slugger Giancarlo Stanton is going on the injured list for the fourth straight season.

Stanton was placed on the 10-day IL with a strained right calf Wednesday as the ailing Yankees made a flurry of roster moves less than an hour before their series finale against Baltimore.

New York also put struggling reliever Jonathan Loáisiga on the 15day injured list, retroactiv­e to May 23, with right shoulder inflammati­on — the latest blow to a depleted bullpen.

Left fielder Joey Gallo was reinstated from the COVID-19 injured list.r.

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