Wednesday, October 23

Cora says he wasn’t accusing Orioles of something nefarious

BALTIMORE — Boston Red Sox supervisor Alex Cora says he was not accusing Baltimore of something nefarious when he identified how few swings and misses the Orioles had towards Chris Sale on Monday evening.

Orioles supervisor Brandon Hyde stated Tuesday he felt Cora was “disrespectful” to the Baltimore hitters. When that remark was relayed to Cora, he sounded shocked and able to attempt to easy issues over together with his AL East rival.

Cora stated his feedback have been about attainable pitch tipping by Sale and never about signal stealing or something shady on Baltimore’s half.

“It wasn’t about pointing the finger at them. If he took it that way, I’ll talk to him right now, but that’s not the case,” Cora stated Tuesday. “I was the guy suspended for what happened in 2017, so I’m the last guy that can accuse somebody of doing something wrong if that’s what he thought I was saying.”

Cora, who managed Boston to a World Series title in 2018, was suspended for the 2020 season for his function within the Houston Astros’ sign-stealing scandal from 2017. He was the bench coach for that Houston crew.

The Orioles made contact on 40 of their 42 swings towards Sale of their 5-4 win Monday.

“Sliders down and in and they hit it. Fastballs up and away, they hit it. Changeups — at one point there, there was no swing and misses. Tough pitches,” Cora stated after the sport. “You’ve got to give credit to them, I guess.”

“We’ve got to take a look at it and see if we find something,” Cora added, “I’m not saying – got to give credit to them, but command was off today.”

When requested about Cora at his pregame information convention Tuesday, Hyde stated: “I’m not sure what he was getting at. Honestly pretty disappointed in hearing that. I thought it was disrespectful to our hitters, to be honest with you. I thought we had a great game plan. I thought we had major league hitters take really good at-bats.”

Cora stated Tuesday there is perhaps a mechanical adjustment Sale could make.

“We’ve got to get him to be more athletic on the mound,” Cora stated. “It’s something we noticed. He’s a little bit too stiff.”

Before Tuesday evening’s recreation, the Red Sox put infielder Yu Chang on the 10-day injured checklist due to a left hand fracture. He left Monday’s recreation after swinging at a pitch. Cora stated Chang was anticipated to see a hand specialist Wednesday in Boston and certain can have surgical procedure Thursday. He may miss six weeks.

Boston recalled utilityman Enmanuel Valdez from Triple-A Worcester.

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