The call, which came yesterday, could not have been entirely surprising to J.T. Snow. Of anyone, he was most aware of the truth of his stint with the Red Sox: Though he might have been needed once, he was no longer quite so useful. And rusting away in the clubhouse and the dugout wasn't exactly what he had planned on when he signed with Boston in the offseason.
So when the team had to remove someone from the roster to make room for last night's starter, Kyle Snyder, it made sense that it was Snow.
Brought in as insurance for Kevin Youkilis's conversion from third base to first base, Snow was thought to be primed for late-inning defensive replacement duty, spot starts, and pinch hitting. But with Youkilis more than capable at first and the rejuvenated Mike Lowell having a stellar season on offense and defense at third, Snow was expendable.
``Youkilis jumped in and grabbed the job," said manager Terry Francona. ``Youk's done everything we hoped he would do. Does it affect J.T. in a negative way for himself? Yeah, it made it harder for him. As far as our team goes, this kid's done a great job and that's good. In our situation, you try to care about people and how it affects them, but our goal is to win games. I think you can do both. I think you can still care but do what is right for the ball club."
Halfway through May, Snow and his agent made known his desire for a trade. And though Snow was designated for assignment yesterday, general manager Theo Epstein indicated that the team has plans in the works for Snow.
Snow had just three at-bats over the just-completed road trip and hadn't started a game for the Sox since the second half of the June 11 doubleheader, which was only the third time he was written into the lineup since April 22.
In the case of Clement, by comparing a recent MRI with one from his stint with the Cubs, the specialist determined that there was no damage, even though Clement has recently suffered from a ``dead arm" and cramps in his biceps. The feelings of soreness and achiness have been with the pitcher all season, only letting up for the first six batters of his start on May 24. The seventh batter? Bernie Williams, who lined a rocket off Clement's right ankle.
``Unfortunately, it's been a weird year," said Clement, who added that he might start playing catch today or tomorrow. ``Maybe I was changing to get through getting hit in the leg, the asthma, and everything else."
Wells remains in San Diego, without imminent plans to return to Boston. With little improvement on the deep bone contusion to his right knee, he's still severely limited in what he can do.
``He's not to the point yet where weight-bearing activities on the knee are coming easy to him," Epstein said. ``Until it gets to that point, you don't really want him going through his delivery because he can end up hurting his arm. Once he gets to that point, we'll get him back here and get his arm strength [back]."
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