Sports

Rays' Rodney looking to build on success from 2012

Modified: February 19, 2013 at 6:48 pm • Published: February 19, 2013

PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla. (AP) — Fernando Rodney chuckles and shrugs his shoulders at the suggestion that regardless of the way he pitches the rest of his career, he may never replicate the success he enjoyed last season.

The Tampa Bay closer set a major league record for ERA by a relief pitcher in 2012, when he rebounded from a disappointing pair of seasons with the Los Angeles Angels to convert 48 of 50 save opportunities and finish with a 0.60 ERA in his first year with the Rays.

Besides ranking second in the majors in saves behind Jim Johnson's 51 for Baltimore, the 35-year-old was a first-time All-Star, topped the big leagues in save percentage and set career highs for appearances and strikeouts.

Rodney knows even if he continues to pitch well in 2013, he may not come close to matching those numbers again.

"It's going to be like Pujols hit .285 and 30 homers. They say it's a bad year for him," Rodney said Tuesday.

"You're going to see that same Fernando Rodney physically and mentally. I'm going to try," he added. "If something similar happens to what happened last year, that's great. I'm going to work hard and do my best, and we'll see what happens. ... But I'm not going to guarantee anything."

The hard-throwing right-hander allowed one earned run over his final 45 appearances to join Hall of Famer Dennis Eckersley as the only pitchers to finish with at least 40 saves and an ERA below 1.00 in a season. Rodney's 0.20 ERA after June 15 enabled him to break Eckersley's season record (0.61 in 1990) for a reliever working a minimum of 50 innings.

Not bad at all for a guy who at this time last year wasn't expected to fill the team's ninth-inning role.

Rodney signed with Tampa Bay as a free agent after two subpar seasons with the Angels, and manager Joe Maddon entered spring training last winter trying to figure out where the newcomer fit into the bullpen.

When Kyle Farnsworth began the season on the disabled list with an elbow strain, Rodney took advantage of an opportunity to close games again.

"Kyle pretty much was going to be the closer and Fernando, we were trying to get him back on his feet, working back into it, talking to him in meetings about picking out the optimal spot to put him in the seventh or the eighth inning, and if the opportunity came up to finish a game he would get that opportunity," Maddon said.

| |

New Rule in OKLAHOMA:
(JUN 2013): If You Pay For Car Insurance You Better Read This...
www.ConsumerFinanceDaily.com
NYC Family Hotels
Find real reviews & new deals for top New York City family hotels.
FamilyVacationCritic.com/NYC