DETROIT — A natural starting pitcher, Brandon McCarthy was forced out of the rotation when the White Sox acquired Javier Vazquez in an off-season trade from the Arizona Diamondbacks.
McCarthy is a reliever now, and it looks like he’s going to be a good one.
In four outings, McCarthy has pitched 6 scoreless innings and allowed just 3 hits and no walks while recording 4 strikeouts.
“McCarthy’s been the key for us,’’ said Sox manager Ozzie Guillen.
There have already been some rumblings about McCarthy being moved from his setup role to closer if Bobby Jenks struggles.
Guillen doesn’t see a switch coming anytime soon.
“Not really,’’ Guillen said. “The way (McCarthy’s) throwing the ball, I thought about it. But I’m not going to overuse this kid for no reason. I’m not going to push the kid into something he hasn’t done. We’ll bring in the guy (Jenks) that we count on to close the game.’’
Road to success: In 1985, Jim Leyland was the White Sox’ third-base coach. That was the same year Ozzie Guillen arrived as the starting shortstop.
While he only spent one season with Guillen, Leyland is not surprised he’s managing the defending World Series champions.
“He had real good instincts, a good feel for the game, and he was a smart player,’’ said Leyland, who is managing the Detroit Tigers. “I think he just has a way with people, and with him, what you see is what you get. He tells it like it is and the way he sees it. If you like it, fine; if you don’t like it, that’s fine, too. He’s going to do what he thinks is the right way, and you have to respect that.’’
Say what? Even though he’s hit 81 home runs over the last two seasons, Paul Konerko said Jim Thome is the Sox’ only proven home run threat.
“I’ve always hit a nice number of home runs, but it’s not something I focus on,’’ Konerko said. “I want to be a guy that can drive home the winning run in the ninth inning with a guy at second and two outs. That’s in my mind more than hitting home runs.’’