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Switch-pitcher Venditte hoping to find fit with Mariners
- Updated: August 28, 2016
CHICAGO — In case you’re wondering, yeah, Pat Venditte has times when his left arm isn’t feeling the best. Or maybe the right. It can work either way, which is how life rolls when you’re the only full-time ambidextrous pitcher in the Major Leagues since the late 1800s.
The easy joke is that the Mariners added three arms to their bullpen on Saturday when they called up rookie Dan Altavilla and the switch-pitching Venditte. Surely Venditte has heard all the one-liners by now, but for him, this is just life.
“I’m like any other pitcher,” he said, which of course isn’t exactly true. “There’ll be certain days when one arm is there and the other isn’t. Some days that’s right-handed, some days it’s left, and you have to find ways to get through.
“Just like anything, the majority of your outings are going to be: How do you find ways to get through them? There’ll be certain days where you’re on both ways. It’s just a matter of working through it, but it’s something I’m used to.”
Being a switch-pitcher has both advantages and challenges, of course. One of the challenges already overcome was getting a glove that can be easily switched from one hand to the other. Venditte uses a six-fingered mitt that he slips seamlessly to either …
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