When I started against the Cubs at Progressive Field for Game 7 in November I wanted to get it done — and there were 38, fans in that ballpark who wanted the same thing, too. You could feel it. It was electric. Instead, I put my head down and I get back to work. There has been speculation that I pitched with injuries during the playoffs.
And not pitching because of an injury is exactly what happened to me last year. After I got nailed by that line drive last May I missed the rest of the season. While dealing with my injury, I watched the moves the club was making — and I watched as people wrote us off because of the other injuries we were dealing with and some of the trades we made.
That was no fun. I wanted to play, to help in some way. But as I sat on the sidelines I started to come to terms with the possibility that my days left in my only professional home could be numbered.
The time might finally have come to move on. I understand that baseball is a business and I understand how this business works — and I accepted the fact that I could be traded. All I can do now is put my head down and go to work again. But before I go, I want to take the time to say thank you to Cleveland. With the fans. With the trainers. With the people I saw in the clubhouse every day. There are also relationships away from the ballpark that I will miss.
I will miss the patients and staff at Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals. I will miss Ali Rieman, the first patient with whom my wife, Amanda, and I built a close bond, and who inspired us to start our foundation. Thank you to guys like Lonnie Chisenhall and Yan Gomes and Carlos Carrasco and Josh Tomlin, and all the other Indians teammates who opened their homes to me and my family. Thank you to Wine Bar Rocky River for the postgame hangouts.
Cleveland will always be special to me and my family. Amanda is from Massachusetts. But for 10 years Cleveland was truly our home. Thank you to the Indians for a decade of great memories: , the win streak in , 20 wins in But they also say that, in a way, returning to Cleveland in a new uniform gave them a sense of closure.
When the pandemic started, I guess we all needed to find hobbies to help us pass the time. For me, it was reading. This has been a pretty big year for me — tra.
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