Wright said he hadn't run the bases since 2003 or 2004, when he was finishing up high school or first in college.
“My first at-bat was last year at Miami and I went 0-for-1," Wright said. "Dodgers (on Friday) was my second time ever having an at-bat.”
Wright took a very big lead, and wasn't expecting a throw to the bag from Blanton.
“That's why I more like dove, jump backed to the bag vs. slide, because it caught me off guard," Wright said. "I didn't think my lead was that big and I panicked, I just jumped back. My initial reaction was 'don't get picked off.' That's the last thing I wanted to do. If the ball's hit hard — I wasn't going to try to score like other hitters would on a single, I wanted to make sure I had a good enough secondary where if it's a double, I could score. But that's what I did, I jumped back to the bag, and I just happened to land on my arm the wrong way. One of those things at first, I was thinking the worst, I was thinking labrum because of the way I felt, but I'm glad that it's not.”
Wright essentially said he was no better than a station-to-station runner, that in fact to be that on a double he needed something extra. That's not too dissimilar from Ortiz running the bases.
http://www.bostonherald.com/sports/red_sox/clubhouse_insider/2016/08/steven_wright_hurt_shoulder_pinch_running_replaced_by_clay