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by civ ollilavad
GOODYEAR, Ariz.: Who else? Of course, manager Manny Acta named Justin Masterson the Indians’ Opening Day starter Friday.
Masterson not only is the logical choice, but also he’s the only choice after being:
A. The workhorse of the staff
B. The most dominating presence among the starters
C. The starter who displayed maximum consistency
D. The club’s hard-luck pitcher, the man who more than anyone in the rotation did more with less.
“This honor is well deserved,” Acta said. “Coming into the season last year, we knew Justin had the stuff. But he had a rough season the year before learning to be a starter.
“But last year when teams rolled into town, they wanted to know if they were going to see him or not. That’s what a No. 1 starter is.”
Opposing hitters didn’t have much fun facing Masterson, who compiled a 12-10 record and 3.21 ERA in 33 starts and one relief appearance. He pitched 216 innings and suffered through a serious scoring drought. The offense scored two or fewer runs in 11 of his starts and one or no runs seven times, probably costing him at least four or five wins.
So Acta’s choice was not difficult.
“Not at all,” he said. “All I had to do was wait for him to come to camp, see him throw on the side and make sure his shoulder was sound.”
Over the winter, Masterson underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left (non-throwing) shoulder to repair a tear in the labrum.
Did the injury bother Masterson last year?
“Probably,” Acta said. “But he never said anything about it.”
Whatever problems the discomfort caused have disappeared.
“My shoulder feels tremendous now,” Masterson said. “I’m not saying that I don’t know I had surgery, but it hasn’t affected me when I’m throwing. The only time it affected me is in the very last game of the season.
“It’s been an issue since 2007, when I had to drain the cyst [that developed from the tear]. I knew I would have to deal with it.”
Then Masterson got technical.
“My shoulder juice was leaking out,” he said, a slight smile on his face.
Masterson hasn’t been dwelling on being the Opening Day starter.
“I wasn’t really thinking about it,” he said. “But it’s a neat thing. My philosophy has always been that each time you start, you have to be the ace that day. You want to be the tone setter if you’re the Opening Day starter.”
When Masterson started, the Tribe lost 2-1 three times, 1-0 twice and 3-2 once. But no matter the level of frustration Masterson might have felt internally, he never showed his disappointment in public, and he never pointed fingers.
“His background and his personality fit well in [dealing] with that kind of stuff,” Acta said. “Nothing got to him.”
To Masterson’s way of thinking, that’s the way it’s supposed to be.
“Sometimes the mental toughness I had to exercise was in talking to the media,” he said. “You can only control what you can control. I don’t have any control after the ball leaves my hand.”
Masterson viewed his lack of run support as his problem. If the offense gave him two runs, it was his job to allow no more than one.
“You don’t want your head to get too big,” he said. “You have to stay humble, remain on an even keel. You don’t want to start thinking you’re so great — ‘Look at me’ — because there’s always somebody better.”
Masterson had to convince his bosses that he was a starter rather than a reliever.
Before he was traded to the Tribe in July of 2009, the Boston Red Sox were convinced that Masterson belonged in the bullpen. After he came to the Indians, club officials were split, but the consensus was that Masterson should start.
His problem: At 6-foot-6, 250 pounds, Masterson had difficulty repeating his delivery for six or seven innings. The Indians stuck with him through a fitful 2010 season, in which he posted a 6-13 record and 4.70 ERA.
“He was able to maintain his mechanics [last year], which is something he had trouble with,” Acta said. “He was used to coming out of the bullpen and maintaining his mechanics for one inning, which is a lot different than doing it for 110 pitches.”
Masterson said the key for him in 2011 was “pounding the strike zone and getting ahead.”
Others might not have been so sure Masterson would make it as a starter, but he was confident.
“There’s no arrogance in this,” he said, “but I know what I should be able to do.”