logo
Guardians reliever Nic Enright, battling lymphoma, earns emotional first save

Guardians reliever Nic Enright, battling lymphoma, earns emotional first save

NEW YORK (AP) — The first career save for Nic Enright was a particularly meaningful one.
Enright, who was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma in late 2022 and is scheduled to complete his treatments later this year, allowed an unearned run in the 10th inning Monday night to close out the Cleveland Guardians' 7-6 win over the New York Mets.
'He was almost crying on the field just now,' Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said. 'If you read his story, it's pretty inspirational.'
Cleveland selected Enright in the 20th round of the 2019 amateur draft out of Virginia Tech. He received his diagnosis Dec. 22, 2022 — 15 days after the Miami Marlins took him in the Rule 5 draft.
After four rounds of immunotherapy in early 2023, Enright made nine minor league rehab appearances for the Marlins before being designated for assignment and returning to the Guardians in late May.
He missed most of last season due to a right shoulder strain, but went 2-1 with a 1.06 ERA in 16 appearances with Triple-A Columbus.
The right-hander has one more round of cancer treatment scheduled for November.
'I made the decision when I was diagnosed in 2022 with Hodgkin lymphoma that I wasn't going to let that define my life and dictate how I was going to go about my life,' Enright said. 'It's something where, for anyone else who is going through anything similar, (it shows) I haven't just holed up in my house and felt sorry for myself this whole time.'
Enright made his major league debut May 25 and has a 2.01 ERA in 19 appearances for the Guardians, whose bullpen is in flux with All-Star closer Emmanuel Clase on paid leave as part of a sports gambling investigation.
Hunter Gaddis and Cade Smith pitched the eighth and ninth innings Monday before Enright entered with a two-run lead. He gave up a two-out RBI single to Brett Baty before retiring Luis Torrens on a fly out to the warning track in right.
'I definitely held my breath as I saw Nolan (Jones) kind of keep running,' Enright said. 'But I had faith. As he kind of got closer to the wall, I realized it was losing steam.'
Enright was showered with beer by teammates in the locker room.
Thursdays
Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter.
'I was so happy, oh, I was going nuts in here,' Guardians starting pitcher Slade Cecconi said with a smile. 'I was going absolutely berserk. He came in running up the stairs, smile on his face.'
Enright thanked his wife, his parents and the rest of his family for their support throughout an interview at his locker. He got the ball from the final out and plans to set aside his uniform and hat as well as a lineup card.
'Really, really cool,' Enright said. 'These last couple of years, especially, I've gone through a lot of adversity and just everything that's gone on. And so for me, it's being able to reflect on those in these moments. I think that helps being able to slow the game down. Because it hasn't exactly been a red-carpet rollout for my career trajectory.'
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NFL longevity demands wisdom as much as determination and talent. These seasoned guys can explain
NFL longevity demands wisdom as much as determination and talent. These seasoned guys can explain

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

NFL longevity demands wisdom as much as determination and talent. These seasoned guys can explain

EAGAN, Minn. (AP) — Harrison Smith, just like anyone approaching middle age, has learned to accept the realities of getting older. The joints, for one, don't quite move as effortlessly as they once did. So that's where the 14th-year free safety for the Minnesota Vikings has aimed his recent training regimens, customizing resistance exercises to simulate the stress that NFL games can place on critical areas of the body. Reaching at full extension to make a tackle at full speed puts the arm muscles and tendons in a vulnerable position. The more fluidly the elbow can bend, the better. 'All the strength work in the world isn't really going to translate to real strength on the field if your joints don't have the range they once did, especially range under load,' Smith said. 'I've come up with different ways to work out that aren't necessarily just the traditional banging weights around. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with that, but if you don't have your range ready, it's kind of almost counterproductive.' In a sport with notoriously short careers, as salary cap constraints perpetually conspire with constant injury risk and overall physical decline, the fountain of youth can seem like a unicorn. Smith's approach provides some valuable clues for finding the most vital source: wisdom. 'When you meet Harrison Smith, right away you understand why he might be the type of person to defy odds, and he's done nothing short of convincing us that over these few years,' Vikings general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah said. The sturdy 30 From a famous quarterback like Aaron Rodgers dropping back in the pocket to a steady six-time Pro Bowl pick like Smith patrolling the secondary, the young man's league still has some space for gray hair. But sticking around takes more than just determination and talent. 'I feel great, actually. I don't feel like a 37-year-old. Not sure what they're supposed to feel like, but I feel a little younger,' San Francisco 49ers left tackle Trent Williams said at the beginning of training camp. 'As we get older, things start to change. I think you've got to pay a little bit more attention to what you put in your body, how you treat your body. Moreso than just being a football player, it's just a natural maturation of a human being. When you get older you can't do the same things you did when you were 22.' According to an Associated Press review of the 90-man rosters across the league last week, there are 30 players currently with an NFL club who were born in the 1980s. That's barely 1%. Not only has Generation X been long gone from the game, once Tom Brady retired in 2023, but Millennials are already in the minority. Rodgers, of course, is the oldest active player at 41, followed by New York Jets kicker Nick Folk (40) and Cleveland Browns quarterback Joe Flacco (40). The sturdy 30 includes six long snappers, two punters and two kickers, plus nine quarterbacks — the positions that usually produce the longest-lasting players. 'You have to evolve every single year,' Kansas City Chiefs tight Travis Kelce said. Smith is the lone defensive back. Kelce is the only offensive skill-position player who's not a quarterback. Williams and Arizona Cardinals left tackle Kelvin Beachum, now a backup, are the offensive linemen. Demario Davis of the New Orleans Saints and Nick Bellore of the Washington Commanders, who plays almost exclusively on special teams, are the linebackers. Then there's a well-decorated group of five defensive linemen: Calais Campbell (Arizona Cardinals), Cameron Heyward (Pittsburgh Steelers), John Jenkins (Baltimore Ravens), Cameron Jordan (New Orleans Saints) and Von Miller (Washington Commanders). 'I still feel great. I feel like I can go out there and dominate,' said Campbell, who returned this year to his original team, the Cardinals. 'I wish I had a magic formula. I think I've just been blessed. God's given me a lot of blessings to play this game I love.' Grinding it out The list has been trimmed, naturally, from last season. Nine players — tight end Marcedes Lewis, kickers Matt Prater, Justin Tucker and Greg Zuerlein, long snappers Jake McQuaide and Matt Overton, safety Kareem Jackson, defensive end Jerry Hughes and defensive tackle Linval Joseph — who logged time on the field in 2024 have not signed with a team this year. Their peers still grinding through summer practices fully realize they'll be permanently on the sideline sooner than later. 'I start a lot earlier doing my training. Just listen to my body when I need to take a rest,' Heyward said. 'But it's more just trying to get stronger as soon as possible after the season. Less time to recover, but recovering through the process.' Mastering the art of recovery, forever a moving target, is a primary focus. Moving around on Mondays after games can be a chore, but figuring out how to maximize those summer strength and conditioning sessions for a mid-30s player is also a challenge. Smith, a soft-spoken leader who'd much rather have a deep locker-room conversation about life in professional football than give the defense a rah-rah pregame speech, fields more questions from young players about recovery than any other topic. 'Sometimes you just grind it out and you don't feel good, and that's how it is,' said Smith, who also mixes in pickup basketball with his offseason work in his hometown of Knoxville, Tennessee. Pride and perspective are part of the NFL roadmap for longevity, too. Heyward's oldest son, 9-year-old Callen, has spent a few nights with him in his dorm room. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. 'There's a hunger there that I know I'm in a rare group that gets to see year 15, but it's something I constantly think about,' Heyward said. 'There's things I want to check off before I hang them up, and I haven't reached those goals yet.' ___ AP Pro Football Writer Josh Dubow and AP Sports Writers David Brandt, Will Graves, Brett Martel, Noah Trister and David Skretta contributed. ___ AP NFL:

MLB roundup: Rangers rally, top Yankees in 10th on Josh Jung's HR
MLB roundup: Rangers rally, top Yankees in 10th on Josh Jung's HR

Canada News.Net

time4 hours ago

  • Canada News.Net

MLB roundup: Rangers rally, top Yankees in 10th on Josh Jung's HR

(Photo credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images) Josh Jung's two-out, three-run home run in the bottom of the 10th inning provided the winning runs as the Texas Rangers rallied for an 8-5 walk-off victory over the slumping New York Yankees on Monday in Arlington, Texas. After New York did not score in the top of the 10th, Yankees reliever Jake Bird (4-2) retired the first two batters he faced before intentionally walking Wyatt Langford. Jung then rocketed his homer into the left field stands. Danny Coulombe (2-0) worked through a two-out walk in the top of the 10th to earn the win. The Rangers' Joc Pederson ripped a one-out pinch-hit solo homer in the ninth inning off Devin Williams that tied the game at 5-5 and sent it to extra innings. Paul Goldschmidt had three hits and scored three runs to lead the Yankees, who have dropped four straight games. Blue Jays 15, Rockies 1 Bo Bichette homered twice, singled and drove in six runs, Ernie Clement had a career-high five hits, and Toronto routed Colorado in Denver. Toronto's Daulton Varsho went deep for the first time since coming off the injured list on Friday and finished with two hits and four RBIs. Nathan Lukes and Joey Loperfido had three hits apiece and Addison Barger, Alejandro Kirk and Davis Schneider contributed two hits each as the Blue Jays collected season highs in runs and hits (25) to back a strong outing by Eric Lauer (7-2), who held Colorado to one run on seven hits over six innings. Ezequiel Tovar had two hits for Colorado, including an RBI single. Phillies 13, Orioles 3 Kyle Schwarber blasted his 39th and 40th homers and drove in six runs to ignite Philadelphia to a home win over Baltimore. Schwarber's grand slam capped an eight-run sixth inning for Philadelphia, which scored all of those runs with two outs. Recently acquired Harrison Bader hit a go-ahead three-run homer earlier in the frame -- his first home run since joining the Phillies -- while three other Philadelphia players homered in the game. Jesus Luzardo (10-5) worked six solid innings to earn the win. Tyler O'Neill and Jordan Westburg each went deep for Baltimore, which has lost four of its last five games. Orioles starter Cade Povich (2-6) gave up four runs and four hits in 5 2/3 innings before the flood gates opened. Brewers 3, Braves 1 Quinn Priester threw seven quality innings and Isaac Collins hit a three-run home run to propel visiting Milwaukee to a victory over Atlanta. Priester (11-2) won his fifth consecutive start, allowing just one run on two hits. The Brewers mustered just three hits, but Collins' 376-foot homer to right field was enough to help the club post its seventh win in eight tries. In the ninth, closer Trevor Megill needed just seven pitches to retire the Braves in order, picking up his 25th save. Fedde (3-12) surrendered three runs on three hits in 5 1/3 innings, walking two and striking out none. Jurickson Profar homered and walked twice, but the Braves fell to 5-11 after the All-Star break. Astros 8, Marlins 2 Jason Alexander pitched six scoreless innings to lead visiting Houston to a win over Miami. Astros outfielder Jesus Sanchez, who made his MLB debut with the Marlins in 2020, slugged an RBI double to open the scoring during Houston's five-run fourth inning. It was Sanchez's fourth game with the Astros after being acquired on July 31. He played 532 games over his first five-plus MLB seasons with the Marlins. Alexander (2-1) allowed just three hits and one walk. Javier Sanoja and Derek Hill homered for Miami in the seventh. It was the first time in 19 years that the Marlins slugged consecutive pinch-hit homers. Marlins starter Sandy Alcantara (6-10) lasted seven innings, allowing nine hits and six runs. Reds 3, Cubs 2 TJ Friedl's tiebreaking seventh-inning single helped the visiting Cincinnati defeat Chicago. Friedl's blooper to shallow center on a 2-2 pitch from Caleb Thielbar was the Reds' third two-out in the inning. His single brought home Jake Fraley, who doubled to right-center off Ryan Brasier (0-1), with the go-ahead run. Emilio Pagan pitched a perfect ninth for his 24th save. Tyler Stephenson homered for the Reds, while Dansby Swanson hit a two-run shot to account for the Cubs' offense. Right-hander Michael Soroka left his Chicago debut after two innings with a sore shoulder, and he is headed for the injured list. Pirates 5, Giants 4 Jack Suwinski hit a two-run shot and later scored the game-winning run in the bottom of the ninth as Pittsburgh rallied for a walk-off victory over San Francisco. After a lengthy rehab from Tommy John surgery, Pirates right-hander Johan Oviedo got his first start since 2023, but lasted just one inning. He surrendered two runs on two hits while throwing 43 pitches. Relievers Yohan Ramirez, Kyle Nicolas, Ryan Borucki and Dauri Moreta (1-0) combined to allow only two runs on five hits over the next eight innings. Giants starter Justin Verlander gave up one unearned run and three hits over five innings. Randy Rodriguez (3-3) walked Andrew McCutchen and hit Suwinski in the ninth to set up the game-winning force out from Isiah Kiner-Falefa. Tigers 6, Twins 3 Kerry Carpenter, Wenceel Perez and Dillon Dingler hit home runs as host Detroit doubled up Minnesota to open their three-game series. Ryan Jeffers, Trevor Larnach and Matt Wallner responded with solo shots for the Twins. Travis Adams, in his first MLB start after four relief appearances, surrendered two runs on four hits while striking out seven in five innings. Noah Davis (0-2) was roughed up in the sixth to take the loss. Detroit starter Casey Mize (10-4) gave up the long balls but allowed only one other hit over six innings. Kyle Finnegan struck out two in the ninth to earn his 22nd save and second since being acquired by the Tigers last week. Diamondbacks 6, Padres 2 Tyler Locklear and Alek Thomas homered, Brandon Pfaadt tied a career high with his 11th victory, and Arizona beat San Diego in Phoenix. Corbin Carroll and Lourdes Gurriel Jr. had two hits and two RBIs apiece as the Diamondbacks extended their winning streak to three games. Pfaadt (11-7) gave up two runs and five hits in 5 2/3 innings, and Kyle Backhus pitched two innings for his first career save. Jackson Merrill and Jake Cronenworth had the Padres' RBIs. JP Sears (7-10) gave up five runs on 10 hits in five innings during his first start for San Diego. Angels 5, Rays 1 Jo Adell hit a two-run homer and Yusei Kikuchi allowed one run on four hits over six innings, leading Los Angeles to a victory over Tampa Bay in the opener of a three-game series in Anaheim, Calif. Taylor Ward went 3-for-4 with two RBIs and Bryce Teodosio had a career-high three hits, stole a base and scored a run for Los Angeles. Kikuchi (5-7) walked two and struck out seven while picking up his first win since July 12 against the Arizona Diamondbacks. Yandy Diaz doubled, walked and scored a run for Tampa Bay, which lost for the 10th time in the past 12 games. Adrian Houser (6-3), making his Tampa Bay debut after being acquired from the Chicago White Sox at the trade deadline, gave up five runs on 11 hits over 5 2/3 innings. Cardinals 3, Dodgers 2 Masyn Winn and Ivan Herrera hit home runs, Yohel Pozo delivered a go-ahead, pinch-hit single in the ninth inning and St. Louis pulled off a victory over Los Angeles in the opener of a three-game series. Cardinals right-hander Sonny Gray shook off recent struggles to give up one run on one hit over seven innings as St. Louis improved to 2-2 on a six-game road trip to San Diego and Los Angeles. Freddie Freeman homered and Tyler Glasnow went seven strong innings, but the Dodgers still lost in the opener of a six-game homestand. Glasnow yielded one run on three hits with two walks and seven strikeouts. Guardians 7, Mets 6 (10 inn.) Gabriel Arias hit a three-run homer and later delivered an insurance sacrifice fly in the 10th inning as visiting Cleveland outlasted New York. Mets' reliever Ryan Helsley (3-2) allowed a pair of unearned runs in the 10th. Pete Alonso went 4-for-5 with a homer and four RBIs, while Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto had two hits each. Cade Smith (4-4) tossed 1 1/3 scoreless innings and wriggled out of a bases-loaded jam in the ninth. Rookie Nic Enright allowed a run in the 10th, but notched his first save. David Fry and Carlos Santana had RBI singles while Steven Kwan and Brayan Rocchio had two hits apiece for the Guardians. Red Sox 8, Royals 5 Jarren Duran hit a three-run home run and Boston extended its winning streak to six games by beating visiting Kansas City. Duran's home run, his 12th of the season, came against Royals starting pitcher Bailey Falter (7-6), who was making his Kansas City debut after being acquired from Pittsburgh. Falter gave up seven runs on eight hits in four innings. He struck out two batters and walked two. Vinnie Pasquantino and Maikel Garcia hit solo home runs for Kansas City. The Red Sox received a strong pitching performance from Brayan Bello, who limited the Royals to one run on six hits in six innings. Bello (8-5) struck out five and walked one. Aroldis Chapman pitched the ninth to earn his 21st save. Romy Gonzalez, Alex Bregman and Wilyer Abreu -- the first three hitters in Boston's batting order -- each collected two hits in the win.

Wallabies hooker David Porecki retires from rugby
Wallabies hooker David Porecki retires from rugby

Winnipeg Free Press

time5 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Wallabies hooker David Porecki retires from rugby

SYDNEY (AP) — Hooker David Porecki, who was a late injury withdrawal from Australia's lineup for the third test against the British and Irish Lions last weekend, has announced his retirement. Rugby Australia issued a statement Tuesday saying the 32-year-old Porecki, who sustained a heel injury last week, was retiring immediately and ending a career that included five seasons in Britain with Saracens and London Irish from 2015. He returned to Australia and the New South Wales Waratahs ahead of the 2021 Super Rugby season, and made his test debut a year later in a win for Australia against England in Perth. Porecki was part of Australia's 2023 Rugby World Cup squad and became the 88th Wallabies captain after an injury to Will Skelton, leading the team in three of its four pool matches at the tournament. Two-time champion Australia was eliminated in the group stage for the first time ever at a Rugby World Cup, hastening a change of coaching staff and leadership. Injury sidelined Porecki in 2024 but he returned to the Wallabies squad last month and started against Fiji in Australia's first test of 2025. His 21st and final test was at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on July 26, when the Lions clinched the three-test series with a contentious late try. 'Rugby has given me so much to be thankful for and has been such a massive part of my life for so long but it feels like the right time for me to turn the page and start a new chapter,' Porecki said in the Rugby Australia statement. Australia's list of injuries continues to grow just four tests in the international season, although there has been some positive news for the Wallabies with a potential return for Allan Ala'alatoa during the Rugby Championship. Initially set to undergo shoulder surgery after sustaining an injury in Melbourne, Ala'alatoa is instead back in Canberra completing intensive rehab in the hope of rejoining the Wallabies for the four-nation tournament. The 31-year-old prop is expected to be sidelined for six to eight weeks, giving him a chance of returning for the Sept. 13 test against Argentina in Sydney or the first match against New Zealand in Auckland two weeks later. ___ AP rugby:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store