Zimmerman's Virginia Competitor
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/12/AR2007031201501.html
By Barry Svrluga
VIERA, Fla., March 12 -- Ryan Zimmerman stood on third base Monday afternoon
at Space Coast Stadium, his second double of the day behind him. David
Wright, who already had a hit of his own, walked over. The pair fell into
conversation, just as they had during batting practice, just as they do from
time to time in the offseason, just as they did seven years ago when they
played alongside each other as teenagers.
Zimmerman is the third baseman for the Washington Nationals, and he is 22.
Wright is the third baseman for the New York Mets, and he is 24. And if each
of their clubs has its way, scenes like that -- Zimmerman and Wright, meeting
at third and chatting -- will play out a couple dozen times a year for the
next decade or more. Need up-to-the-minute evidence? On Monday, Wright
singled three times in three at-bats. Zimmerman one-upped him, just as if
they were competing in the gym back home, hitting those two doubles and a
towering home run in the Nationals' 9-6 victory.
For those keeping score on a perfect spring day, that's a combined 6 for 6.
"We never talked about it then," Wright said before the game. "But it's
pretty amazing to think of now."
There is, apparently, something in the Tidewater area of Virginia that allows
elite athletes to grow like kudzu. The list is nearly endless, from Lawrence
Taylor to Michael Vick in football, from Allen Iverson to Alonzo Mourning in
basketball, from boxers such as Pernell "Sweet Pea" Whitaker to, recently, a
host of baseball players.
Zimmerman, who grew up in Virginia Beach, and Wright, who was raised in
nearby Chesapeake, are part of a wave of players and prospects on their way
to stardom now. It wasn't enough that they played together on their travel
team in the fall of 2000. B.J. Upton -- who became the second overall pick in
the 2002 draft -- toggled between second and shortstop with Zimmerman.
"It's scary to think," Nationals Manager Manny Acta said.
The debate in the National League East now is who will be better this year,
next year, five years from now, when their careers are over. Florida's Miguel
Cabrera is a more explosive offensive player than either Wright or Zimmerman,
but there's no telling how long he'll play third, no guarantee how long the
Marlins will be able to hold onto him. Zimmerman and Wright, it seems, could
be linked in perpetuity.
"I think we both like where we're at," Zimmerman said, "and it's kind of fun
to think about facing each other so much."
But think also about the Tidewater Orioles, the traveling team coached by Lee
Banks back when Wright and Zimmerman were in high school. Then, Wright was
the prospect, a year ahead of Zimmerman and more fully developed. The
following spring, he was taken by the team he rooted for as a child, the
Mets, in the first round.
Zimmerman wasn't anywhere near that level of prospect at that time.
"He was small," Wright said. "You could tell he had a good approach at the
plate and good tools, but he just wasn't the physical guy he is now."
As the two stood and chatted at third base Monday, that seemed unlikely.
Zimmerman has filled out, a robust 6 feet 3 and nearly 220 pounds. Wright is
three inches shorter, at least 20 pounds lighter.
"There were a couple of years where we kind of lost contact, when I was in
the minors and he was in college," Wright said, "and then I saw him in his
sophomore year at the University of Virginia, and it was unbelievable. He was
a totally different kid. He matured."
Now, they are trying to mature together. In offseasons past, they worked out
at the same Chesapeake gym, often training with yet another major leaguer
from the area, the Twins' Michael Cuddyer, as well as both Upton and his
younger brother, Justin, the No. 1 pick in the 2005 draft. Last offseason,
Zimmerman spent a good deal of his time training in Chesapeake, but Wright
was in New York most of the time, where his six-year, $55 million contract --
signed last August -- allowed him to buy a place.
But when they do get together, it matters.
"We all want to try and outplay each other and one-up each other," Wright
said. "It's fun, because I think it pushes us. He sees me lift a certain
weight, and Zimm's going to try to do that much more. I see him do something,
I'm going to try to outdo it."
Thus far, Wright has a slight edge. His first full year in the majors,
following a 69-game debut in 2004, he hit .306 with 42 doubles, 27 homers and
102 RBI. He followed it up by hitting .311 with 40 doubles, 26 homers and 116
RBI last year.
"I think he's progressed every year little by little," Zimmerman said.
"That's the goal, to get a little better. He's done it offensively and
defensively. The numbers he's had, I don't think I'd be disappointed."
Zimmerman hit .287 with 47 doubles, 20 homers and 110 RBI as a rookie last
season. He has pledged to cut down on his 120 strikeouts and to draw more
than 61 walks.
If he does, he just might catch up to Wright's batting average and approach
his career on-base percentage of .375.
Either way, when they're not chit-chatting at third base -- one arriving
after a double, the other playing defense -- they will pull for each other.
Last season, when Zimmerman hit a game-winning homer against the New York
Yankees, Wright shot Zimmerman a text message as soon as he saw the highlight.
"As cheesy as it sounds," Wright said, "you're proud of each other."
--
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