National Post

Pearce thriving with Red Sox

- Rob longley in Boston

In the moment, anyway, the surprise moment in which Steve Pearce found out he was going to be a member of the Boston Red Sox, it was a sobering bit of news he didn’t really want to hear. Seriously.

It was on the night of June 28 when Blue Jays manager Ross Atkins tracked down Pearce by phone at a Toronto hotel where he was participat­ing in then-teammate Josh Donaldson’s annual charity bowling event.

On a rare off night, likely blowing off some steam, possibly having the occasional adult beverage, the trade came as a shock to Pearce.

“We were having so much fun and I got the news and it was like — crap I’m having fun with all my guys,” Pearce said in an interview. “I was like ‘Guys, I gotta go. I just got traded.’ At the time it was like oh no and I’m going to a competitor but it was the best move for my career.”

It has been that by a substantia­l margin.

Beyond the obvious of being three wins away from a World Series win prior to Wednesday’s Game 2 of the best-of-seven series vs. the Los Angeles Dodgers, Pearce has to pinch himself almost daily when he pulls on his Red Sox jersey.

He’s had the opportunit­y not only to play an important role for the American League champions, starting more often than not at first base. But the fact that he’s contributi­ng heavily at the plate for a team that is borderline dominant has been a significan­t upward career move for the 12-year major league veteran.

“First base is my primary position, the one I always came up playing,” Pearce said of the assignment he rarely got to see with the Jays for what became obvious reasons. “I’m way more comfortabl­e at first base than I am in the outfield. I feel like I can be more comfortabl­e and play my game.”

When Pearce signed a two-year deal with the Jays in December 2016, the intention was for him to see significan­t time at first in a platoon situation. But when the season began, he was recovering from arm surgery and another teammate was about to make the bag at first his own.

By the time the Lakeland, Fla. native was healthy enough, Justin Smoak was well into the tear that would eventually send him to the 2017 All-Star game and an every day player at the corner spot.

“It was part of the game, that’s been part of my career anyway,” Pearce said of the way things worked out his first season with the Jays. “I always seem to find myself behind somebody that’s proven better or having a breakout year. I love Smoak and it was awesome to watch what he was doing and the player that he has become.

“But what stank last year is I was going to play first base and split with him but I had my arm surgery and I had to go to the outfield. That was very tough to say now I have to go out and throw the baseball as hard as I can instead of playing first base where I was comfortabl­e.”

Pearce’s fortune in Boston has been the opposite of what it was in Toronto. Brought in essentiall­y as depth to face left-handers, he started out hitting hot and never cooled down. Less than 24 hours after the call in Toronto, Pearce was hitting cleanup and the first pitch he saw with the Red Sox he crushed into the left-field corner at Fenway.

Since then he’s hit for power against both lefties and righties and a go-to guy for first-year manager Alex Cora.

‘We put the ball in play and we get our hits against lefties, but we didn’t hit the ball out of the ballpark,” Cora said. “But as soon as Pearcie got here, we started doing that and hitting for extra-base hits against lefties, and he’s been great.”

Relaxed and thriving off the environmen­t with the Sox, Pearce is an important piece against the Dodgers, who are starting left-handers in three of the first four games.

“I’m very fortunate that I am here,” said Pearce, who started at first for each of the first two games of the World Series. “When we weren’t winning that much in Toronto, we had a talented team, but it was just injuries that crushed us. For me to come over here after the trade and to be accepted the way I was and to contribute the way I’ve been able to … it’s just a great situation for me.”

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