Joe Kelly Reluctant To Become Reliever Despite Red Sox’s Bullpen Woes

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Joe Kelly’s done it before. He’s not in any rush to do it again.

The Boston Red Sox’s bullpen is in a world of trouble, especially now that closer Koji Uehara will miss the rest of the season with a fractured wrist. But the club hasn’t approached Kelly about converting back into a reliever. And that’s OK with the right-hander.

“I would prefer to start,” Kelly said this week in Miami, according to WEEI.com.

Kelly hasn’t pitched out of the bullpen since 2013 — he still was with the St. Louis Cardinals — but with the 27-year-old struggling as a starter and the Red Sox in need of relief reinforcements, a transition seems logical. Kelly, after all, served as a closer in college.

The issue? Kelly’s closing career wasn’t without hiccups from a physical standpoint.

“I don’t know if it was because I just started pitching, but closing bothered my arm a lot,” Kelly said, according to WEEI.com. “When I was in college, I was shut down every year for a few weeks for arm problems, and I don’t know if it was because I was just new to pitching or the amount of repetition I got outings-wise. So I don’t know what the correlation was. I really enjoyed it, but I ran into a few arm problems.

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“I would be shut down for two-week or three-week increments. I didn’t have a full healthy year except for maybe my first year.”

Kelly, who briefly was demoted to Triple-A Pawtucket earlier this season, sports a 4-6 record and a 5.96 ERA in 18 starts. Perhaps a role change would lead to better results. Then again, Kelly would need to overcome mental hurdles that come with having experienced physical issues as a reliever in the past.

“Yeah, as soon as I started to feel something, I would start to think about it,” Kelly said. “I went through a lot of tendinitis and inflammation and a lot of aches always.”

The Red Sox could use an effective Kelly. They also need a healthy Kelly, which perhaps explains the organization’s reluctance to make a switch that seems to make so much sense on the surface.

Thumbnail photo via Rick Osentoski/USA TODAY Sports Images