Liam Hendriks |
The White Sox closer is Liam Hendriks. And he reminded everyone of that Wednesday, retiring all five men he faced to secure a 3-2 win over the Oakland A's.
Newly acquired Craig Kimbrel was not available for Wednesday's game, and Aaron Bummer got into a jam in the top of the eighth inning.
Bummer gave up back-to-back singles with one out. Hendriks entered and cleaned up the mess, retiring Mitch Moreland on a grounder to first base and Mark Canha on a routine fly to center field.
Hendriks then had a dominant ninth inning, striking out Starling Marte, Matt Olson and Jed Lowrie in succession. That's not an easy save -- those are the 2-3-4 hitters in the Oakland batting order, and the A's are a contending club.
I've seen a lot of chatter online about Kimbrel possibly supplanting Hendriks as the Sox closer, and Hendriks did not help himself with back-to-back poor outings against the New York Yankees last week.
However, Hendriks leads the American League with 28 saves, and a couple of bad games doesn't erase four months of effective relief work.
Not to mention, the Sox are committed to Hendriks for at least three years. He chose to sign with the Sox last offseason when he could have gone elsewhere. There's a long-term commitment made by both parties there, and I think that matters. Hendriks isn't going to lose his job that easily.
There's also this: Kimbrel hasn't pitched that well since joining the Sox. He has a 4.70 ERA in 7.2 innings and eight appearances since coming over from the Cubs. I wouldn't say he's forcing the Sox's hand here.
That said, I wouldn't be surprised if Kimbrel is used in a closing opportunity if one arises Thursday. Hendriks probably isn't going to work back-to-back days after recording five outs Wednesday. But make no mistake, he's the closer.
The Sox are 71-50. They have a 12-game lead in the AL Central.
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