GLENDALE, Ariz. — White Sox reliever Reynaldo Lopez was at church when he heard the news about Liam Hendriks. It felt like the right place to be for Lopez, who said a prayer for his bullpen mate who has non-Hodgkins lymphoma.
“It’s a scary thing,” Lopez said.
The Sox opened spring training with pitchers and catchers reporting Wednesday, and absent was Hendriks’ big presence, Australian accent and signature bellows of disgust with himself after a bad bullpen pitch. Teammates caring about his well-being first will worry about the void at the back end of the bullpen later, reliever Kendall Graveman said.
The same goes for players around the league. Graveman had requests from players around baseball, including Anthony Rizzo, for Hendriks’ number. While a Red Sox prospect in 2008, Rizzo was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma and went through six months of chemotherapy.
“So during that moment I knew he was going to have a lot of people kind of saying ‘Hey, we’re thinking about you. If you need anything from us, from my family to yours, let us know,’ ’’ Graveman said. “And seeing him here and in good spirits ... he’s going to continue to be Liam and put his work in. Our prayer from our family is that he has a speedy recovery and that he’s cancer free, first and foremost.”
Teammates are hopeful Hendriks pitches at some point this season.
“I talk to Liam a lot,” reliever Joe Kelly said. “We were playing catch multiple times [in the offseason] and when he came out and told the world what happened, he went to chemo and three days later we played catch again. He’s been grinding. He’s one of those guys that can do that kind of thing. He can switch what troubles he has off the field when he gets on the field and that’s very hard to do.”
Knowing Hendriks, who said he has pitched with a torn ACL during his career, Kelly said it won’t be long after treatment for the 33-year-old two-time American League Reliever of the Year to be pitching again.
“Since he’s been throwing it’s not going to be too far of a process for him to come back,” Kelly said.
Starter Dylan Cease said he was shocked and devastated when he heard about Hendriks’ illness on Jan. 8.
“But I’ve been surprised seeing him around the clubhouse,” Cease said Thursday. “He’s in a good mood. So, I definitely feel better about it now.”
In Hendriks’ absence, first-year manager Pedro Grifol figures to mix-and-match in the ninth inning. Graveman, Lopez, lefty Aaron Bummer and Kelly — who feels healthy for the first time in three spring camps — are possibilities.
“Regardless of whether Liam was available now or not, we’re going to need more than one,” Grifol said. “Once we get closer and we start setting up our gameplan for the day, we’re just going to leverage guys. And if a closer emerges and that’s what we do, then that’s what we do. But I’m a big leverage guy. That’s my mindset right now.”
In the meantime, a seat in the bullpen for Hendriks will be kept open. If it’s next to Kelly, it will feel like nothing has changed.
“My humor is kind of dark ... I like mean comedy,” Kelly said. “So when Liam comes back it’s easy to talk crap a little bit, and he’s a guy who can take it and it picks him up a little bit. The way we can go about it is kind of making fun of it. It’s a serious thing and it’s a horrible thing, but for Liam and our relationship, it’s one of those things the minutes we have together in the locker room where I can do something like gets his mind off of that kind of thing.
“I think he seems great. He has his days where he will probably tell you he’s tired or that he doesn’t feel good, but he’s the same Liam to me.”