
I've played video games my whole life, this never happened to me,” he said. He will use a splint to protect the finger - and in time will get back to his video game fun. I thought I felt good.”Īn X-ray after the game revealed a hairline fracture. “I'm not one to make excuses so I don't think it did. I wanted to go out there and pitch, maybe it did (affect me),” Luzardo said. Luzardo gave up six runs and five hits in three innings to take a loss in the 8-4 defeat to the Orioles. Even though his hand became swollen within minutes of the injury, Luzardo convinced the A's he would be fine to make his start. In hindsight, he might not have tried to pitch through it the way he did against Baltimore. “I've never had something like this happen and I don't plan on anything like this happening again.” “There's no way for me to describe this in any other way other than stupid and maybe immature,” he said. He didn't share what game he was playing. On a Zoom video call, Luzardo demonstrated how his hand came out to his side and hit the top of a table, what he called a reaction to something that happened in the game. Luzardo noted it's not as if he threw his hand down in anger or out of frustration - it was merely bad luck, he said. But I still made a mistake and that's something that I'm going to learn from and I'm not going to do again,” he said.

“It was an immature mistake and it was a stupid mistake. “I feel like a lot of people don't realize that we are people as well and we make mistakes, the same mistakes that fans make, the same mistakes that people that work normal jobs make." “I'm a 23-year-old kid, I make mistakes,” Luzardo said Tuesday. Luzardo is out indefinitely with a broken bone in his finger. Luzardo has apologized to his teammates and Athletics manager Bob Melvin for the accident, which occurred Saturday when he banged his hand into a table while playing a video game four hours before a start. The Oakland lefty will continue to do so with fervor, even after the embarrassment of breaking the pinkie on his pitching hand while gaming. OAKLAND - Jesús Luzardo has played video games all his life.
