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Chicago White Sox’s Gavin Sheets embraces Baltimore homecoming against the Orioles: ‘It’s a lot of fun coming back here’

Gavin Sheets hit a grounder to short with the bases loaded in the seventh inning Wednesday against the Baltimore Orioles.

Jorge Mateo ranged to his right, went to his backhand to field the ball, jumped and made an off-balance throw to first.

Sheets raced down the line. If he’s out, the inning would be over. If he’s safe, it would be an insurance run for the Chicago White Sox.

“Once I saw Mateo going to his right for the backhand, I knew I had a chance to beat it out,” Sheets said. “So once I saw that, I ran as hard as I could. That basically sums it up. As soon as I saw him go backhand, I knew he couldn’t go to second. I knew it was going to be a race between me and him.”

Sheets beat the throw for an infield single and RBI, his third of the game.

The outfielder/first baseman from Lutherville, Md., about 15 miles from Camden Yards, grew up attending Orioles games and has had a productive visit to the park this week with eight hits in the series.

Sheets had three hits in Thursday’s demoralizing 4-3, 11-inning loss. He doubled with one out in the eighth, moved to third on a groundout and scored when José Abreu singled to left to give the Sox a 3-2 lead.

The Orioles tied the game on a Kyle Stowers home run with two outs in the ninth against closer Liam Hendriks. The at-bat was extended when left fielder Adam Engel raced into foul territory but dropped what would have been a game-ending catch.

The Orioles won in the 11th when Cedric Mullins scored on an Anthony Santander single against Jake Diekman.

The Sox had to finish the game without Yoán Moncada, who left in the fifth with left hamstring tightness. The third baseman received a visit from the training staff after making a great fielding play on a Terrin Vavra bunt to begin the second inning.

Moncada singled in the fourth, his second hit of the game, but appeared to be favoring his leg as he made his way to first base. Romy Gonzalez entered in the fifth to play second while Josh Harrison shifted from second to third.

“I didn’t get to enjoy it as much last year because it was only my second or third week in the big leagues,” Sheets said of the homecoming. “This year I’ve taken it all in, embraced it a little bit more, enjoyed it a little bit more. It’s been awesome. Having family and friends here who you grew up with and in a stadium you grew up in is awesome.”

Sheets had two hits in Tuesday’s 5-3 loss and went 3-for-5 with the three RBIs in Wednesday’s 5-3 win.

“The hometown boy, it’s awesome,” teammate Andrew Vaughn said before Thursday’s series finale. “Phenomenal hitter, puts great swings on balls. He came up clutch for us.”

Sheets’ father, Larry, played for the Orioles (1984-89), Detroit Tigers (1990) and Seattle Mariners (1993).

Asked how often he went to the Camden Yards growing up, Sheets said, “A lot.”

“It’s a lot of fun coming back here,” he said.

Sheets was heating up before the homecoming.

Entering Thursday, he slashed .347/.340/.510 with five doubles, one homer and nine RBIs in his last 18 games. He had four multihit games during that stretch, including a career-high four hits Aug. 18 against the Houston Astros at Guaranteed Rate Field.

Sheets batted sixth and fifth in the order the first two games of the Orioles series. He was moved to the No. 2 spot as part of a reconfigured lineup Thursday. Manager Tony La Russa inserted Vaughn in the leadoff role.

“Vaughn can hit anywhere,” La Russa said. “We’ll see how long this lasts. But mostly I like 3-4-5 (Luis Robert, José Abreu and Eloy Jiménez, who rested Wednesday while recovering from being hit by a pitch in the left elbow Tuesday). Gives our run producers a chance to hit with runners on base, and Andrew is one of the best at doing that.”

Vaughn recalled batting leadoff while in college for California “a couple of weekends.” He had two at-bats in the top spot this season after entering for an injured AJ Pollock on April 9 in Detroit.

“Everybody steps in the box the same way,” Vaughn said of the assignment. “It’s the same thing as hitting three, four, five, six or seven. You’re just starting the game off and once that happens, the lineup just keeps rolling.”

He homered on the first pitch Thursday, and Sheets followed with a single. Vaughn also doubled off the left-field wall in the third.

Sheets was glad to have the opportunity to make an impact in front of many familiar faces.

“My dad is sitting right behind (the plate), so I can hear him the whole at-bat,” he said. “I can see (family and friends) all throughout the stadium. Especially going out to right field, I’ve got a bunch of friends out there. Just being able to enjoy it a little bit more this year, embrace it a little bit more has been a lot of fun.”

During last season’s games in Baltimore, friends made shirts with the name “Sheets” on the back. He went 1-for-10 with two walks and two runs in the three-game series, hitting a home run.

This season, fans were spotted in the Camden Yards stands with Sheets Sox jerseys.

“It’s fun to see that going around and my friends doing that,” Sheets said. “Bunch of messages from people I didn’t even know were here. It’s been a great week.”

Leury García, Yasmani Grandal set for rehab assignments

La Russa said infielder/outfielder Leury García and catcher Yasmani Grandal left the team Thursday for rehab assignments with Triple-A Charlotte.

García went on the 10-day injured list Aug. 17 with a lower back strain. Grandal went on the 10-day IL on Sunday with a left knee strain.

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Source: Berkshire mont

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