The Niagara Falls Review

Napoli is auditionin­g for a job

Indians manager Francona tells slugger to have fun

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GOODYEAR, ARIZ. — Mike Napoli felt back home on Wednesday, walking around a clubhouse he knew and catching up with teammates he enjoys.

Everyone involved knows this reunion between Napoli and the Cleveland Indians most likely is just temporary and will end up with Napoli playing elsewhere.

“It came together pretty quick,” Napoli said Wednesday after signing a minor league deal. “Talking with my agent and he said there would be an opportunit­y to come in here to camp. Obviously we had conversati­ons about the roster and what is going on. I’m very fortunate this organizati­on has given me the opportunit­y to come here and get into shape and kind of showcase a little bit. I’m very fortunate to have them have me in camp.

Napoli is at spring training largely because manager Terry Francona wanted to give the 36-year-old slugger an opportunit­y to showcase what he still has, but with the clear knowledge there isn’t a spot on the Indians roster for Napoli. Edwin Encarnacio­n is Cleveland’s designated hitter; Yonder Alonso is Cleveland’s first baseman. Only an injury would change those plans at this time.

Napoli is with Cleveland to audition for others.

“I know the situation,” Napoli said. “I’m willing to do whatever I have to do to get ready to play to get some game time. The understand­ing of everything is plain and clear. We know what is going on. There’s nothing that’s going to ruin any relationsh­ip here with these guys. They’re giving me an opportunit­y to get ready to play and it’s probably going to be somewhere else.”

Francona noted the difficulty of the situation for Napoli and how invested he was in the success of the Indians in 2016 when they lost to the Cubs in the World Series. His message when Napoli arrived was simple: have fun.

“The one thing I was reminding him, I said, ‘Nap, of all the things you have done in this game, all the time you have put in, you deserve the right to enjoy when you play. I want you to enjoy.’ I think he understood that,” Francona said. “I hope it helped. I think it did because when I was listening to him talk he can’t be all in because he understand­s that he might; there are just a lot of variables. I get it. And the way Nap is built, he is built to be all in. So it’s a little different. But he’s earned the right to enjoy when he plays and I want him to do that.”

Napoli hoped never to leave Cleveland after helping the Indians within a game of the title in 2016. He hit 34 home runs and 101 RBIs, but when Cleveland landed Encarnacio­n as a free agent before the 2017 season, Napoli was odd man out. He slumped last season in Texas, hitting just .193 with 29 homers and 66 RBIs, and found himself among the large list of prominent free agents without a team.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Mike Napoli hit a career-high 34 home runs and 101 RBIs in 2016, but slumped in Texas in ‘17.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Mike Napoli hit a career-high 34 home runs and 101 RBIs in 2016, but slumped in Texas in ‘17.

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