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    HomeSportsFinally back on the mound, Lucas Giolito is making his mark on...

    Finally back on the mound, Lucas Giolito is making his mark on the Red Sox’s rotation: ‘I can be myself again. I can be a true, real teammate’

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    BOSTON — It has become an all-too-common narrative arc, though it remains an uplifting and exciting scene: a talented and accomplished pitcher making his first appearance in the big leagues after a year-plus away while rehabbing from elbow surgery.

    On Wednesday in Toronto, the latest such instance was Red Sox right-hander Lucas Giolito’s return to the mound, accompanied by the usual remarks from the broadcast about how many days it had been since he pitched in the major leagues.

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    For Giolito, that number was 577.

    Any pitcher who makes it back after such a lengthy layoff is worthy of thorough commendation. But for Giolito, the ill-fated timing of his surgery and the unusual circumstances under which he completed his rehab — in the background of a big-market team for which he had yet to throw a pitch — made his return all the more meaningful.

    After establishing himself as one of the more durable and dependable starting pitchers in the American League, Giolito struggled down the stretch in the final year of his contract in 2023 — a poorly timed swoon entering free agency. Nonetheless, Boston believed in him as a bounce-back candidate and signed him to a two-year, $37 million contract shortly after the calendar flipped to 2024. Giolito then arrived in Fort Myers, Florida, eager to reestablish his credentials as a frontline starter and ready to make a strong first impression on a Boston fan base starved for some stability in the rotation.

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    And then he blew out.

    Elbow discomfort during a Grapefruit League outing turned out to be more than just a temporary nuisance. Giolito underwent internal brace repair surgery on March 13 and was ruled out for the 2024 season. Before he could make a regular-season start in his new threads, he was on the shelf for the year.

    And this wasn’t Giolito’s first rodeo. He’d undergone Tommy John surgery mere months after being drafted by the Washington Nationals in the first round in 2012, so he was familiar with the rehab process he was once again facing. At the same time, Giolito was a teenager then, still in the earliest stages of his career, naive about what it meant to be pulled away from competing at the highest level.

    This time around, with more than a decade of pro experience and more than 1,000 major-league innings to his name, grappling with being physically unable to contribute was a much taller task for Giolito. And that feeling was exacerbated as he worked to fit in with a team he had only just joined.

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    Giolito tried to stay engaged with his new teammates as the season progressed, but it often felt hollow.

    “Last year, you know, Netflix was here, all this stuff’s going on, and I’d be around, and it’s like, ’I’m on the team’ … but I’m not. I haven’t done s***,” he told Yahoo Sports.

    “I like watching the game and learning and analyzing pitching and all the fun stuff like that. But being away from it and not being able to compete, it felt like a piece of me was missing. There were times where it felt a little lonely, or it’s like, ‘What can I do to be helpful?’

    “Not really anything.”

    As if waiting an entire year weren’t enough, Giolito’s Red Sox debut was delayed further by a left hamstring strain suffered during spring training, which put him on the injured list to start this season. And across five minor-league rehab starts in April, his numbers — a 5.19 ERA with 18 hits and 13 walks allowed in 17 ⅓ innings — did not hint at a smooth transition back to the big leagues. But Giolito wasn’t concerned about his statline, remaining confident that the work he was putting in would pay off.

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    “I’ve made plenty of starts in the big leagues — that’s my comfort zone, right? The rehab games were not my comfort zone,” he recalled. “Pitching in Double-A and Triple-A, driving all over the place, not really having a good routine — I was treating those games like rehab games. I was working on the mechanics. I was doing things that were a little bit uncomfortable, but I was really trying to hammer in some stuff we’ve been working on.

    “And so the results were very poor in those, but I had confidence in myself that once I got into my comfort zone — which is competing at the big-league level, being in a stadium with that extra deck and kind of feeling that environment — I was gonna feel comfortable again.”

    Sure enough, Giolito cruised through most of his outing Wednesday against the Blue Jays, wiping away any concern that his shoddy form from rehab outings would carry into his big-league return. He needed just 66 pitches to complete five scoreless innings, with seven strikeouts, just one walk and three hits allowed, before the Blue Jays got to him in the sixth.

    “We had a very good game plan going in,” he said. “It was commanding the fastball to both sides and up and down. When it was evident the slider wasn’t working the way that we wanted to, it became more of, ‘OK, let’s utilize that heater to kind of open up spots for the changeup to work,’ and then I was able to command the changeup to both sides … I was pleased with the first five innings. I felt right back at home.



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