[新聞] Around the Horn: Corner infielders
原來A-Rod and Mientkiewicz十五年前曾經是隊友.....high school football team
Around the Horn: Corner infielders
Mientkiewicz set to haul in throws from his ex-high school QB
By Bryan Hoch / MLB.com
The following is the second in a series of weekly stories on MLB.com
examining each Major League club, position by position. Each Wednesday until
Spring Training camps open, we'll preview a different position. Today: Corner
infielders.
NEW YORK -- If you had been in Miami in 1992, watching Westminster Christian
School race to a Class 2A football title, you would have seen high school
quarterback Alex Rodriguez firing passes to a tight end named Doug
Mientkiewicz.
Fifteen years later, very similar actions will be on display in New York, as
A-Rod and Mientkiewicz again link as teammates in the Yankees infield. And
like before, it'll be Mientkiewicz's job to grab those throws from Rodriguez.
"I'm looking forward to sharing the same uniform again," said Mientkiewicz,
who finalized a one-year contract with the Yankees on Jan. 5. "He's going to
help me a lot more than I'm going to help him."
Having watched Rodriguez morph from the gridiron to a No. 1 draft pick on his
way to baseball superstardom, Mientkiewicz is qualified to help analyze a
situation that grew especially trying for Rodriguez last season.
The 31-year-old third baseman batted .290 with 35 home runs and 121 RBIs in
yet another All-Star campaign, but it was a year that will be remembered more
for Rodriguez's prolonged slumps and postseason struggles.
As Yankee Stadium fans cooled on Rodriguez, speculation of trade talk began
to heat up. Rodriguez went 1-for-14 with an error in the American League
Division Series against the Tigers, including batting eighth in the deciding
Game 4.
Rodriguez insisted that he continued to fit in the puzzle and would be part
of the solution, and the Yankees later issued a vote of confidence that
Rodriguez would not be traded.
Mientkiewicz said that much of Rodriguez's troubles had likely stemmed from
pressing.
"Alex is such a perfectionist," Mientkiewicz said. "He realizes the talent
that he has. You're talking about, probably, the guy who's going to go down
as the best baseball player to ever play the game. I think sometimes people
have a perception of him to be perfect all the time.
"Trust me, no one is harder on themselves than Alex is on himself. He's
always been that way since the day I met him -- always been working his butt
off, to the point that it's almost a detriment and he doesn't allow his
abilities to take over."
以下在講洋基的一壘手們 以及工具人Cairo
Much of the logic in importing Mientkiewicz centers on defense, though the
32-year-old had a bounceback offensive season in 2006. He batted .283 in 314
at-bats for the Royals before his campaign ended with August back surgery.
Now reportedly healthy and on track for Spring Training, the 2001 Gold Glove
Award winner was brought back to New York, where he spent 2005 with the Mets.
Mientkiewicz's main task will be to help the Yankees' infield glovework while
engaging in part of a platoon at first base.
Since making his Major League debut in 1998, Mientkiewicz ranks second among
all first basemen (behind Travis Lee) with a .996 career fielding percentage,
and Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said, "I'm not sure if there's
anybody better defensively than him."
"I know sometimes as an infielder you don't feel very comfortable with your
release and where the ball may go," Mientkiewicz said. "To know that someone
on the other end is going to do their best to catch it -- it sounds pretty
simple, but it goes a long way."
With Jason Giambi now slotted as a designated hitter after appearing in 68
games at first base in 2006, the left-handed-batting Mientkiewicz will garner
the bulk of first-base at-bats against right-handed pitching, against whom
Mientkiewicz has batted .259 over the past three years.
That leaves Andy Phillips and Josh Phelps, a selection in December's Rule 5
Draft, to battle it out in Spring Training for the right-handed portion of
manager Joe Torre's first-base mix.
Phillips, who will turn 30 in the first week of the regular season, had a
disappointing 2006 season in his first extended taste of big-league action,
batting .240 with seven home runs and 29 RBIs in 246 at-bats.
Though Phillips has punished left-handed pitching in the Minor Leagues,
batting .365 against them for Triple-A Columbus in 2005, he hit just .195
(16-for-82) against big-league southpaws last year.
Phelps, 28, was selected in the Major League portion of the Rule 5 Draft from
the Orioles, meaning that the Yankees must keep him on their roster for the
entire season or offer him back to Baltimore for $25,000, half the selection
cost.
"For $50,000, I thought it was worth the free look to see what he can do,"
Cashman said in December.
Having last played in the Major Leagues in 2005, Phelps spent all of last
season with Triple-A Toledo in the Tigers system, batting .308 with 24 home
runs and 90 RBIs, numbers which placed him among the International League's
offensive leaders.
Utility infielder Miguel Cairo, who recently agreed to terms on a one-year,
$750,000 contract to return to the Yankees, should see some action at both
corners.
The 32-year-old Cairo started at all four infield positions, plus one game in
left field, while batting .239 last season for New York.
Bryan Hoch is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the
approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
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我把白天當作夜晚這樣大而殘破
為了讓此刻星光斑駁
而我愛過 死亡如果不是流浪
《夏宇˙給時間以時間》
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