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 Post subject: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 12:07 am 
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Good for him!

http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/pitc ... cks-052213

Updated May 23, 2013 12:42 AM ET

Joe Bick rattles off the date — Feb. 10, 2012. It was the day Bick, an agent, broke difficult news to his client, left-hander Neal Cotts.

“Neal, it’s heartbreaking for me to tell you this, but I think we’ve run out of chances,” Bick recalls saying. “I’d be surprised if we’re able to get you a job.”

No team would take a chance on Cotts, who had undergone Tommy John surgery on his left elbow in 2009 and four surgeries on his right hip starting in ‘10.

But Bick was wrong about Cotts’ career being over.

Cotts, 33, made his first appearance since May 25, 2009, on Tuesday night, pitching a scoreless inning in the Rangers’ 1-0 loss to the Oakland Athletics. He was even better Wednesday, striking out four in two scoreless innings in a 3-1 victory over the A’s.

As studies in perseverance go, Cotts is difficult to top. While out of baseball, he gave pitching lessons at Slammers Training Academy in Lake Forest, Ill., — and threw bullpen sessions on his own, waiting for a team to call.

“Every once in a while, a scout would come in and look at high school and college kids and take a glance at me,” Cotts says.

Scouts often liked what they saw, Bick says, but then they would request Cotts’ medical records. Shortly after that, the conversations almost always ended.

Cotts, a member of the 2005 World Series champion White Sox, had undergone surgery to repair a torn labrum in his hip and three more operations after the hip became infected.

The Yankees brought him to minor-league camp in 2011 and then released him, telling him he could not pass their physical. The Phillies were ready to sign Cotts later that season but backed off, citing the same concerns.

“His medical file is the biggest medical file I’ve ever seen in my life,” Bick says. “I’ve got to send like six e-mails to get it all through.”

But just days after Bick braced Cotts for the likely end of his career, the agent spoke with Rangers general manager Jon Daniels.

“I asked him if he was looking for left-handed pitching,” Bick recalls. “He said, ‘Absolutely.’ I told him the whole Neal Cotts story. And I said, ‘I will tell you right now — there is no way in hell he can pass your physical because of his hip.’

It's never too early in the season to sneak a peek at divisional races.
“Jon says, ‘I don’t care. If he’s good enough, we’ll find a way.’”

Sounds simple, but it wasn’t.

The Yankees, Bick says, released Cotts out of fear that they might incur a financial obligation if the pitcher suffered another injury on their watch.

Bick recalls Yankees GM Brian Cashman telling him, “If I put him on the 40-man roster, it could be a situation where I’m paying him workman’s compensation for the rest of his life.”

Cashman declined comment, citing medical confidentiality. But he did not dispute that such a conversation took place.

Why, then, were the Rangers willing to take a chance on Cotts?

Daniels cites three reasons:

*Past experience with players who had medical red flags, but defied their prognoses.

“There are times where we have walked past a player — particularly in the draft — and then saw them succeed,” Daniels says.

*A sense that Cotts was motivated only by his desire to return to the majors, and not financial gain.

Daniels recalls Bick telling him, “Technically, we can’t waiver his workman’s compensation rights. But that’s not what this is about. This is not about getting someone to pay his medical bills. He just wants another chance.”

*A report from Scot Engler, a Rangers professional scout who went to see Cotts throw and came away impressed.

The Rangers signed Cotts to a minor-league deal on Feb. 20, 2012. His physical? “Neal called me and said they took my heart rate and blood pressure and said, ‘You’re good,’” Bick recalls, chuckling.

Cotts, who had missed the entire 2010 and ’11 seasons, reported to minor-league camp, but lasted only about a week before the Rangers summoned him to the major-league side. He then had a big spring, competing with fellow lefty Robbie Ross for a bullpen spot. But in the final week of games, Cotts strained his left lat muscle.

He did not pick up a ball for a month.

“It was a definite setback,” Cotts says. “But compared to what I had gone through the last couple of years, I didn’t think much of it. I wasn’t happy. But I knew it was something I could work through.”

He returned and spent the entire season at Triple A. Daniels says Cotts’ command was never quite the same, but the Rangers offered the pitcher another minor-league deal last November, and Cotts jumped at it.

“We didn’t look around at anyone else,” Bick says. “We knew it would be a waste of time.”

Cotts failed to make the Rangers out of spring training, but after working with Triple A pitching coach Brad Holman on the angle of his pitches, he began to get stunning results.

In 26 innings combined between the majors and minors, Cotts has struck out 46 and walked only five.

“Pretty much everyone that went in there and saw him the first six weeks said, ‘You’ve got to get this guy up there,’” Daniels says.

Daniels says that three or four clubs contacted him after the Boston Globe’s Nick Cafardo mentioned Cotts’ Triple A stats in his Sunday notes column on May 12. Those teams said that they could give Cotts an immediate major-league job, but Daniels balked, saying that the reliever was in the Rangers’ plans.

On Tuesday, nearly four years after his last major-league appearance, Cotts made his return.

“In the bullpen, I was pretty amped up, pretty gung-ho, excited — and a little bit nervous,” Cotts says. “I guess you could say my heart was racing.

“But once I stepped on the mound, I calmed down pretty quickly. I was still more amped up than I would want to be. But it felt pretty normal.”

He had a familiar catcher — his former White Sox teammate, A.J. Pierzynski. After his outing was over, Pierzynski flipped him the ball and said, “Welcome back.”

“He’s a great guy. I’m so happy for him,” Pierzynski says. “I told him he looked the same except that he throws cutters and sliders now. He used to just blow guys away.”

Different pitcher or not, Cotts never accepted that his career might be over, even as he and his wife, Jamie, became the parents of a son, Maddon, 4, and daughter, Stella, who is almost 2.

Cotts said that Jamie frequently would ask him if he wanted to continue pitching. Cotts would respond, “Yes,” and Jamie would tell him, “Then keep doing what you need to do in case something happens.”

“I never got any feeling that she would want me to shut it down — just the opposite,” Cotts says. “I kept throwing bullpens. I didn’t go full bore in workouts, but I tried to keep my arm ready. Hopefully somebody would take a look, and we would go from there.”

He got the chance that not even his agent expected.

He wouldn’t quit.


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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 12:18 am 
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That's pretty good, but Scott Radinsky had cancer.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 12:24 am 
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That is pretty good, but didn't Dravecky's arm basically fall off twice?

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 12:28 am 
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Yeah, Dravecky had a pretty good comeback, but Lou Gehrig was so unlucky he got his own disease and died.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 12:30 am 
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:lol:
Can you imagine the Gehrig story with the modern media? stoneroses would have a stroke.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 12:32 am 
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Apologist wrote:
:lol:
Can you imagine the Gehrig story with the modern media? stoneroses would have a stroke.

Wait until they publish the x-rays of his bats!

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 6:10 am 
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Good for Cotts. I hope he can pitch for several years now, without breaking down. Nice to see someone who loves the game more than the money succeed.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 7:38 am 
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Elmhurst Steve wrote:
Nice to see someone who loves the game more than the money succeed.

He's not playing for free.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 8:01 am 
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newper wrote:
Yeah, Dravecky had a pretty good comeback, but Lou Gehrig was so unlucky he got his own disease and died.


Whenever I would drive around with my mom and she would see a panhandler or a guy collecting for charity she would always say, "Give him something." And I would say, "Ya know, Ma, if I give 'something' to every one of these guys I see, I'll soon have nothing myself. I've got to pick my spots." So one day there was a guy with a big sign collecting for the Les Turner ALS Foundation. The sign said, "HELP CURE LOU GEHRIG'S DISEASE". Of course, my mom said, "Give him something." I said, "That's a scam, Ma. I'm almost certain Lou Gehrig is already dead."

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 8:42 am 
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steve olin was decapitated.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 8:45 am 
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Neal Cotts blows. I hope he never pitches again.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 8:47 am 
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and Derrick Rose still sits

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 8:48 am 
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good dolphin wrote:
and Derrick Rose still sits

:lol: :lol: :lol: At this point I kind of want Derrick to be like oh I don't know if I can go to start next season. Too soon. Don't want to risk it.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 8:49 am 
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There needs to be a Derrick Rose still sits thing...kind of like the "not impressed" gymnast

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 4:37 pm 
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I'll always remember being at a Sox game in the mid-00s and seeing some muscled up jock dude and his quite-attractive GF who was boasting a pinstriped shirt that said "I'd Neal for Cotts." I have no idea what kind of message I was supposed to get from that (regarding the guy) but hey Neal, shit dude, smoke 'em if you got 'em.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 4:45 pm 
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Nice to see God approved Cotts return to baseball.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 4:48 pm 
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Hatchetman wrote:
steve olin was decapitated.


That's a tough injury to come back from. :pale:
Yeah, I'll never forget hearing that story on The Score in the 90's. Felt so horrible for his family.


Good for Neal Cotts.....grindy.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 4:54 pm 
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Eaglo Jeff wrote:
Hatchetman wrote:
steve olin was decapitated.


That's a tough injury to come back from. :pale:
Yeah, I'll never forget hearing that story on The Score in the 90's. Felt so horrible for his family.


Good for Neal Cotts.....grindy.

I thought this was about Steve Olkin I had to google it. I thought Chris Cross snapped after the sports huddle went off the air.

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 Post subject: Re: Neal Cotts
PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 4:56 pm 
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Phil McCracken wrote:
Eaglo Jeff wrote:
Hatchetman wrote:
steve olin was decapitated.


That's a tough injury to come back from. :pale:
Yeah, I'll never forget hearing that story on The Score in the 90's. Felt so horrible for his family.


Good for Neal Cotts.....grindy.

I thought this was about Steve Olkin I had to google it. I thought Chris Cross snapped after the sports huddle went off the air.

Lord knows I did when mine did. :wink:

R.I.P., Chris Cross..........wait, what? :?

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