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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Sport
Russell Dorsey

After long journey, Tommy Nance the latest Cubs’ rookie pitcher to make his debut

AP Photo/David Banks

It’s been a while since the Cubs have had this many young pitchers contribute at the big league level, but the moment doesn’t seem to be too big for the team’s rookie relievers.

Left-hander Justin Steele and right-hander Keegan Thompson have both made a big impact on the Cubs’ bullpen during their first stints in Chicago and have begun to get more opportunities in higher-leverage situations.

“It just makes me smile and laugh and takes me back to the great memories that I have of when I first made that same journey and all the things that were going through my head, manager David Ross said. “You just love to see you guys have success and I’m proud of those guys for embracing those moments to get out there and succeeding.”

The latest pitcher to make his presence felt in the big leagues is right-hander Tommy Nance, who’s had a long journey while trying to get his shot to reach the Majors, including a few injuries.

“I don’t have kids right now, but when I have kids one day, they ask me, ‘Why did you stop [playing]?’ I didn’t want to not have an answer, or not have a good answer. So for me, that also pushed me forward,” Nance said. “It was everything I imagined and more. It was always my dream to suit up and step on a major-league diamond.”

Nance, 30, is older than your average rookie, but after going undrafted and even playing independent ball for the Windy City Thunderbolts in Crestwood, he finally got the moment he’s waited his entire baseball life for.

Nance made his Major League debut on Monday pitching a 1-2-3 ninth inning in the Cubs’ 7-3 win over the Nationals and throwing a slider past Josh Harrison for his first major-league strikeout.

“That’s one of those [moments] where you smile when you come off and get to shake the hand of a guy making his debut to close out a four-run lead,” manager David Ross said. “Stuff was nasty. 96, throwing strikes. The breaking ball, it’s real.”

“When I came up the tunnel and up the stairs and stepped onto the field, it was a whole different atmosphere,” he said. “I think even more so when I got the call to go into the game and stepped out of the bullpen going through those doors. It’s just lights, like lights on me, I can hear the fans behind me, calling my name and I’m jogging out to the mound. It’s just an unbelievable experience and atmosphere.”

Cubs send Maybin to the Mets

The Cubs have traded outfielder Cameron Maybin to the Mets for cash considerations. Maybin had been playing at Class AAA Iowa and was not on the team’s 40-man roster. The Cubs acquired Maybin at last year’s trade deadline and re-signed him this offseason. Maybin had a .250/.304/.365 slashline in 18 games with the Cubs.

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