WATCH: Red Sox Pitcher Chris Sale Trashes Clubhouse After Rough Rehab Start
Red Sox pitcher Chris Sale trashed the dugout after a particularly rough rehab start at Triple-A Worcester.
Red Sox pitcher Chris Sale trashed the dugout after a particularly rough rehab start at Triple-A Worcester.
Boston’s Chris Sale, out for the season following Tommy John surgery, thought about the prospect of his teammates sequestered in the Phoenix area for an extended period if Major League Baseball and its players adopt an all-Arizona start to the season.
“Over the course of the 2018 season, the Red Sox were frankly they were unstoppable,” Trump said. “I watched.”
Boston’s Chris Sale was hospitalized last week with a stomach ailment while Clayton Kershaw threw an inning last weekend, but both left-handed seven-time All-Stars will pitch in Tuesday’s World Series opener.
The reloading Red Sox pulled off the biggest deal yet at the winter meetings, acquiring the dominant ace Chris Sale from the Chicago White Sox on Tuesday for a hefty package of four prospects.
Chris Sale spoke out for the first time since his scissors shouted for him.
Chris Sale’s demonstration against White Sox uniform policies came as just the latest protest by Chicago’s players.
The White Sox tossed Chris Sale a curve on uniforms. He threw a cutter back at them.
The Chicago White Sox wanted players to wear their 1976 collared jerseys. Chris Sale didn’t. Saturday’s starting pitcher didn’t let the team don the distinctive blue-collared pullovers, so the White Sox didn’t let him pitch.
As Major League Baseball’s All-Star Game commences Tuesday night in San Diego, starting pitcher Chris Sale says the cancer death of Tony “Mr. Padre” Gwynn made him quit smokeless tobacco forever.