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Orioles RHP Tomoyuki Sugano ponders his future with the trade deadline approaching

Orioles RHP Tomoyuki Sugano ponders his future with the trade deadline approaching

Fox Sports2 days ago
Associated Press
BALTIMORE (AP) — There are plenty of reasons why the Baltimore Orioles would love to hold onto Tomoyuki Sugano for the rest of the season.
The Japanese right-hander is loved in the clubhouse, rarely misses a start and, most important, knows how to win on the mound.
Those qualities also make Sugano quite appealing to a contender looking to upgrade its starting rotation before Friday's trade deadline.
Sugano shackled the Colorado Rockies on four hits over six innings in Baltimore's 5-1 victory Sunday. He matched his season high with eight strikeouts and improved to 8-5.
Signed to one-year contract in December, Sugano has clearly been a success in his first season in the big leagues after an impressive career in Japan. The question is, will the 35-year-old rookie stay in Baltimore or be traded by the last-place club?
Sugano would prefer to stay put, but he's beginning to understand that anything can happen right up until the final minute of the fast-approaching deadline.
'It's obviously my first time. I don't know what's going to happen,' Sugano said through an interpreter after Sunday's game.
After a solid start with the Orioles, Sugano struggled in June and was blown out in successive starts against Tampa Bay (June 27) and Texas (July 2). Then, after adjusting his delivery, he gave up just four hits in six innings against the Mets on July 10 to get back on track.
On Sunday against the Rockies, he looked particularly sharp in what might have been his final outing with the Orioles.
'We need him,' interim manager Tony Mansolino said. 'When Sugano throws the ball well, he gives us a chance to win. And we need to win games.'
So does a team looking to make a run at a pennant or World Series championship.
'If they watched the last three starts, I'd take him,' Mansolino said. 'You watch that Mets start, I'd take him in a heartbeat.'
If Sugano goes elsewhere, he will be missed by his new friends in Baltimore.
'He is so well-liked in that room,' Mansolino said. 'The players mess around with him, he messes around with his teammates. He's done it very gracefully.'
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB
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Or would benefit from pitching out of the bullpen. 'That's a whole different cycle, a whole different process. It's emotional, it's mental, it's physical – a whole new set of challenges. 'I was allowed to go through a process that I could start to really feel what I was doing. And try to find that feeling again – the balance in my lower half. The tempo that I'm used to. And that really kind of makes me who I am.' His resurrection occurred far quicker than could be imagined on his Easter nadir. He still remembers the moment – a bullpen session in Anaheim on May 10, his father's birthday – where the touch and the feel and the balance were there. Morton pitched two perfect innings that day, returned to the rotation two weeks later and has been mostly superb since. In 13 games, including 10 starts, he's struck out 71 batters in 63 ⅔ innings, posted a 3.53 ERA and given up seven home runs – after giving up five in his first 20 innings pitched. He's also pitched just 95 ⅓ innings, offering a relatively fresh arm for a contender with November dreams. 'There's just regret' It's been a decade since Morton's been traded, a December 2015 swap in which Pittsburgh shipped him across the state to Philadelphia. It was then that Morton began a transformation that wouldn't fully take until he signed with the Houston Astros before the 2017 season. And they still call him Charlie Bleeping Morton (complimentary) in Houston. He went 29-10 in two seasons there, most notably pitching the last four innings of World Series Game 7 in 2017, a Fall Classic where he gave up one run in 10 ⅓ innings. Two seasons in Tampa Bay brought a raucous 2019 playoff run and a trip to the COVID bubble World Series in 2020. Morton was still coming down from that emotional six-game loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers when Atlanta GM Alex Anthopoulos called, asking if he wanted to be a Brave. One year later, he started Game 1 of the World Series at Houston, but a Yuli Gurriel line drive struck him in the right leg. Morton steeled himself against the pain, threw 16 pitches and finished the fourth inning, retiring three batters. On a broken fibula. The Braves would win the game and the World Series, and it's not just the extra jewelry Morton would bring to a contender seeking pitching. And yet, there's still the lingering feeling of what could've been in Baltimore, dampening any excitement he might harbor about gaining a few spots in the standings via trade, let alone the uncertainty of getting uprooted. 'Really, the only way I think I can explain it is, how would you feel?' he says. 'Maybe younger guys, there's more excitement in the anticipation. I've gotten to pitch in a few World Series. Got to pitch in a bunch of playoff games. Got to be on a bunch of really good teams. 'For me, having actually contributed to the successes of teams in the past, being here right now, getting to know everybody here, I want them to feel that, too. And that, for me, is sad. Because I know I didn't do my part for that to happen. I finally start to get to know everybody in here, start to feel that connection with everybody in the room, and if that's the direction the team's going, it's too late. 'It's too late on the baseball side. It's not too late on the friendship side. That's more where I am mentally and emotionally. There's just regret.' By week's end, there may be a seventh team added to Morton's career grid, or perhaps a return engagement in Houston or Philly. Either way, come November, he'll converse with his family, 'weigh everything through the lens of a husband and a father,' he says, and decide whether he wants to do this for a 19th season. His children are now 12, 10, 8 and 6, Morton and his wife taking on the impossible task constructing a cost-benefit ratio of another year of a well-paying job versus the pull of home life. 'And then it's like, well, OK, is it the right fit?' says Morton. 'Is it the right place? Is it something we can make work?' Morton almost always seems to pull that part off. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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