TEMPE, Ariz. - The A's moving truck has already left the desert, and the team will be bolting for the airport after Wednesday's Cactus League finale.
Spring training is quickly drawing to a close, with only the three-game Bay Bridge Series remaining before the games start to count. To mark that reality, here's a look at the five most burning questions Oakland faced back when camp started in mid-February, and what kind of answers have materialized since …
1) Does Sonny Gray return to his old self?
The A's absorbed their first major injury blow early when Gray, their potential Opening Night starter, went down with a strained lat muscle after a March 7 start. It wasn't exactly what the right-hander had in mind coming off a 2016 season that sent him to the disabled list twice. Encouraging news came last week when Gray was allowed to start throwing again one week ahead of schedule.
When exactly he returns is tied to how soon he gets back on the mound. He's been playing catch out to 105 feet, but manager Bob Melvin stressed the A's aren't going to rush things with Gray. Until further notice, the assumption is still that Gray will miss most of April.
2) Can a ‘healthy' outlook be sustained?
Given what you read in the above item, obviously things haven't gotten off to a great start in this department. Jake Smolinski, a candidate to make the team as an extra outfielder, showed up to camp with a sore right shoulder and required labrum surgery. Second baseman Joey Wendle, who was ticketed for Triple-A to begin with, also has been set back by a shoulder injury. But the focus, from an injury standpoint, is on Gray. If he were to miss just the first month of the regular season, that's an absence the A's should be able to cover. Any longer than that, and his presence really will be missed.
After last year's roster-wide rash of injuries, better health is the most important first step in the A's escaping the American League West cellar.
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3) Who wins the closer's job?
Six weeks of spring training has yet to reveal an answer here. If Melvin knows who his closer is, he isn't saying publicly. Lefty Sean Doolittle, one of the veteran anchors of the relief corps, said Melvin hasn't discussed roles yet with the relievers themselves. Expect more news on that during the Bay Bridge Series, which runs Thursday through Saturday. Of the four assumed ninth-inning candidates - Doolittle, John Axford, Santiago Casilla and Ryan Madson - none has been lights-out in Cactus League games.
The guess here is Madson, the A's main closer last season, gets the first crack at the role this year as well.
"I don't even think it's on anybody's radar," Doolittle said Tuesday. "That's one of the things that makes our bullpen effective. We're not as attached to those roles as people might think."
4) Where does Ryon Healy fit into the puzzle?
He fits in a little at first base, a little at third base and a little at DH. What we know is that Healy's bat will be in the lineup regularly, it's just a matter of where. Melvin spread his time pretty evenly between all three spots. Healy responded with a terrific spring at the plate. Entering Tuesday, he ranked third in the Cactus League with 16 RBI, the most spring RBI by an Athletic since Kevin Kouzmanoff also had 16 in 2010. Healy will play first base against lefties, platooning with Yonder Alonso. He'll spell Trevor Plouffe at third. But it stands to reason a large chunk of his time will have to come at DH.
"I think he's handled it well," Melvin said. "It's not easy, especially for a younger guy that was originally a first baseman. He worked as hard as anybody last year to make himself a third baseman. Now, it's a little bit different for him and he knew that coming into camp. I think he's handled his time wisely, worked hard at both positions, and he knows he has to move around a little bit this year."
5) Can the A's get their mojo back?
If a positive clubhouse vibe plays any part in a team turning around its on-field fortunes, the A's are off to a good start. The early indications are that newcomers Plouffe, Matt Joyce, Casilla and Rajai Davis - those latter two are in their second stints with the A's - all add some nice leadership qualities and mesh well with the returning vets. True, you can't really read too much in spring training, when everyone always gets along in the spirit and optimism of a new season. But the A's do seem to have better components up and down their roster to lead to a healthier season-long chemistry.
Just as you've read in the past, getting off to a strong start in the standings is the most effective way to maintain that chemistry.