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ARLINGTON, Texas — Five years after his legendary relief appearance in the longest game in World Series history, Nathan Eovaldi is finally getting the opportunity to start a game in the Fall Classic.

The 33-year-old right-hander will take the ball in Game 1 for the American League champion Texas Rangers, who host the upstart Arizona Diamondbacks in Game 1 at 8 p.m. ET on Friday.

The game comes five years and one day after Eovaldi pitched the 12th through 18th innings for the Boston Red Sox in Game 3 of the 2018 World Series before giving up a walk-off home run to Max Muncy in a 3-2 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Eovaldi’s relief appearance, which came on the heels of him pitching one inning in Games 1 and 2, is revered among modern pitchers, who have come to regard it as one of the finest pitching performances of this century, even in a losing effort.

“I’m very grateful for the past experiences,” Eovaldi said Thursday. “Just being able to participate and get into the World Series was big. I kind of had my moment there.

“It’s more so just getting back into the World Series. It’s such an unbelievable experience and moment. That’s what you play every year for.”

Texas, the No. 5 seed in the AL, will face a Diamondbacks team that hasn’t been to the World Series since beating the New York Yankees in 2001. Pitching in his home state of Texas, Eovaldi will headline the rotation for a Rangers team looking to win its first championship in 63 years of existence.

“That would mean the world,” Eovaldi said. “It’s an amazing experience. Again, to be able to say you that were part of the first one, you kind of set the foundation for the years to come.”

Despite going 68-94 last season, the Rangers entered the winter looking to round out its solid lineup with frontline pitching. They signed former New York Mets ace Jacob deGrom to a five-year, $185 million deal and added left-handed Andrew Heaney as well.

With Eovaldi still available toward the end of December, Rangers general manager Chris Young negotiated a two-year, $34 million deal around Christmas.

And Eovaldi has been the gift that keeps on giving. He was one of the best pitchers in the AL in the first half, and after struggling following his late-season return from an arm injury, he has turned into Playoff Nate, the dominant force capable of carrying teams with a five-pitch mix.

Eovaldi has thrown at least six innings in all four of his starts this postseason: one in the wild-card series clincher, another in the division series clincher and a pair in Texas’ ALCS victory to go 4-0.

His coup-de-grace game, however, remains from 2018.

The Red Sox had taken the first two games from the Dodgers, and manager Alex Cora was pushing for another. In came Eovaldi, the Red Sox’s ninth pitcher of the day, to throw a scoreless 12th. Boston scored in the 13th, only to see a throwing error from Ian Kinsler — now a Rangers special assistant — allow the Dodgers to tie it.

Eovaldi threw four more shutout innings before allowing a Muncy walk-off home run in the 18th inning on his 97th pitch. Long removed from two Tommy John surgeries, Eovaldi has settled into an elder-statesman role, and his bona fides are clear. But that won’t tamp the excitement down — or prevent him from doing what he does so well.

“It’s more so trying to control the adrenaline and the emotions out there,” Eovaldi said. “Make sure from the first pitch on I’m trying to settle in as fast as I can into the game to go out there and try to go as long as I can.”

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St. Pete expects Trop to be ready for Rays’ opener

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St. Pete expects Trop to be ready for Rays' opener

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — City officials in St. Petersburg showed off the newly enclosed dome at Tropicana Field on Wednesday and said they are confident the ballpark will be ready for the Tampa Bay Rays‘ home opener April 6 against the Chicago Cubs following work to repair the damage caused by Hurricane Milton last year.

“We have no concern about being open or ready for Opening Day,” said Beth Herendeen, managing director of City Development Administration. “We hope we keep it that way.”

Some seam work remains on the final panels to close small gaps at the top, and interior repairs are well underway.

Tropicana Field sustained extensive damage on Oct. 9, 2024. High winds ripped sections of the original roof, allowing rain to fall into the stadium bowl for months. Water caused mold and damage to electrical, sound and broadcast systems.

The city contracted ETS, AECOM Hunt and Hennessy Construction to lead the repairs and brought back Geiger Engineering, the dome’s original designer, to help reengineer the roof. The synthetic membranes of Polytetrafluoroethylene are thicker and built to current wind-load codes.

“The roof that was replaced had to be designed to today’s codes,” city architect Raul Quintana said. “It’s a much stronger material than it was 35 years ago, and it’s going to last.”

The Rays played 2025 home games across the bay in Tampa at Steinbrenner Field, the spring training home of the New York Yankees.

Installation of the new roof began in August, and the final panel was put in place Nov. 21. Some triangular panels still show color variation, with newer pieces beige and earlier ones already bleached white, but Quintana said they will eventually match.

“It took about three months to bleach out the ones that were first installed,” he said.

The air-conditioning system has been reactivated, and contractors are focused on electrical work, seating and sound equipment. The team is upgrading the luxury suites and stadium videoboard.

“Drywall is being hung, seats are being painted, and the catwalk electric is being installed,” Herendeen said. “The new stadium sound system will be installed this month and tested in January.”

New artificial turf is scheduled to arrive in mid-January. Other final updates include new home plate club seats, clubhouse carpet and lockers, and flooring on the outfield deck.

Tampa Bay starts the season with a nine-game trip to St. Louis, Milwaukee and Minnesota.

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Sources: LHP Kay returning to MLB with ChiSox

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Sources: LHP Kay returning to MLB with ChiSox

Left-hander Anthony Kay and the Chicago White Sox are in agreement on a two-year, $12 million contract with a club option for a third season, sources told ESPN on Wednesday, bringing the veteran back to Major League Baseball after a successful two-year run in Japan.

Kay, 30, posted a 1.74 ERA over 155 innings for the Yokohama BayStars this year, featuring a new cutter, an improved changeup and a fastball that still sits at 95 mph years after he was one of the game’s best pitching prospects.

The White Sox are aiming to replicate their success with domestic pitchers returning from Asia two years after signing Erick Fedde to a two-year, $15 million deal.

Kay’s deal will pay him $5 million each of the next two seasons and will include a $10 million club option for 2028 with a $2 million buyout, sources said. He can earn another $1.5 million in incentives.

He will slot into a White Sox rotation that includes young right-handers Shane Smith, Davis Martin and Sean Burke. Chicago used 18 starters this year, when it went 60-102 — a 19-game improvement over 2024, when the White Sox set a major league record with 121 losses.

Kay’s return comes after a five-year major league career in which he posted a 5.67 ERA in 85⅔ innings with the Toronto Blue Jays, Chicago Cubs and New York Mets, who took him in the first round of the 2016 draft out of UConn. Kay cruised through the minor leagues and was dealt to the Blue Jays along with Simeon Woods Richardson for Marcus Stroman at the 2019 trade deadline.

Following a return to the Mets in 2023, Kay departed for Yokohama, where he threw 136⅔ innings of 3.42 ERA ball in his first season.

While Nippon Professional Baseball features a depressed offensive environment, Kay still ranked fifth in the league this year in ERA and allowed only eight home runs in 155 innings while striking out 130 and walking 41.

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Reports: Reds closer Pagán back with $20M deal

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Reports: Reds closer Pagán back with M deal

Free agent closer Emilio Pagán has agreed to return to the Cincinnati Reds on a $20 million, two-year contract, according to multiple reports.

The deal, which was first reported by The Athletic, was pending a physical and had not been announced.

Pagán would have the right to opt out of the contract after the 2026 season.

The 34-year-old right-hander became the Reds’ closer early last season and went 2-4 with a 2.88 ERA and a career-high 32 saves in 38 opportunities. He ranked second in the National League in saves and tied for fifth in the majors.

Pagán is 28-27 with a 3.66 ERA and 65 saves in nine major league seasons with Seattle, Oakland, Tampa Bay, San Diego, Minnesota and Cincinnati.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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