Young resurrects his life ... and his career
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/columns/story?columnist=kurkjian_tim&id=2916835
By Tim Kurkjian
Tigers manager Jim Leyland sought out Dmitri Young recently, shook his hand
and congratulated him on the way he was playing and, more important, the way
he was living his life. It was Leyland's Tigers who released Young last year.
It was not something Leyland wanted to do, but he told Young last week, "It
was the best thing that's ever happened to you."
Leyland was right.
"Jim told me there were issues that I had to deal with," Young said. "Now I'm
having the time of my life. Believe me, I know, after what I've been through
on and off the field."
In straightening out his life, Young has resurrected his baseball career that
began with such promise 11 years ago in St. Louis. He is hitting .338 --
third-best in the National League -- with seven home runs and 36 RBIs,
batting in the middle of the order for the Washington Nationals. Since May
17, he has hit .431, the best batting average in baseball in that time. He
has a chance to make the All-Star team. And, chances are, around the trading
deadline, contending teams will want a veteran switch-hitter who can really
hit.
"Amazing," said Nationals infielder Ronnie Belliard. "Good hitters never
forget how to hit."
Young would like to forget most of 2006, but the issues he had to address
were major. First was a divorce. "That was tough," he said. "We have three
children. But we [he and his ex-wife] get along." Then, he said, "there was
that legal thing" -- he pleaded guilty to a domestic violence charge after
being accused of assaulting his then-girlfriend. Young was sentenced in
September to a year of probation.
Then, around last Thanksgiving, he discovered he had diabetes.
"I had an infection that would not heal, and I had flu-like symptoms," Young
said. "I went to urgent care three times in two days. After the third time, I
called my parents to tell them goodbye. I told my kids that I loved them, and
I hoped they would always be happy. I called 911. When the ambulance arrived,
my blood-sugar level was 987. When it's that high, four things can happen --
stroke, coma, organ damage or death. They put an IV in me and got it down to
893. I spent four days in the hospital, three days in the ICU. I know how
lucky I am today. I thought there was going to be a tombstone with my name on
it."
He was alive, but his baseball career appeared to be over. "No one was
knocking on my door," he said. "They were all scared off by last year. For
nine years, I had been a great citizen for baseball, so that kind of puzzled
me. You know, the whole second chance thing. Thankfully, [Nationals general
manager] Jim Bowden believed in second chances." Young was invited to minor
league camp in spring training. "Jim told me I had to stay clean, which was
no problem for me: You can't mess around with diabetes," Young said. "I
really worked hard."
The hardest work was dealing with diabetes. Now he injects himself -- usually
in the stomach -- three or four times a day.
It was odd for a veteran player with a solid track record to be in minor
league camp in February.
"I was ready to give up on baseball," Young said. "But I looked around at the
prospects. They were so young, they were so fresh. They were so wide open
about pro ball ... Chris Marrero ... Justin Maxwell ... Collin Balester. I
was an open book to them. I told them how I learned from my mistakes. I told
them everything. And they wanted to know everything. They wanted to know
about me hitting three home runs on Opening Day [in 2005], and the way I flip
my helmet after doubles. I realized then that I had more juice in the tank."
Young got himself in shape in spring training, was transferred from minor
league camp to major league camp, and made the club out of spring training.
The injury to first baseman Nick Johnson (broken leg, he won't be back until
August at the earliest) left a position open for Young.
"[Nationals coach] Lenny Harris was with me in minor league camp. He has
always been a friend and a fan of mine, he was a teammate of mine with the
Reds, and he would tell me every day, 'You can do this; go prove to everyone
that you can still do this,'" Young said. "I didn't quit. I didn't want my
kids to think I was a quitter. I set a good example for the young guys. I was
doing cardio 45 minutes before every workout and 45 minutes after."
He has also been a great influence for the young players in the Nationals'
clubhouse.
"I count my blessings every day," Young said. "I had a lot of people praying
for me. But the job is not done. The job won't be done until I do everything
I can to restore my name."
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 124.8.113.93
推
07/04 20:54, , 1F
07/04 20:54, 1F
Nationals 近期熱門文章
10
13
PTT體育區 即時熱門文章
21
43
19
24