Truro News

Tulo aiming for long career playing short

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He arrived early Thursday sporting a Superman T- shirt but Troy Tulowitzki wants to become more of an iron man with the Toronto Blue Jays.

The 32- year- old infielder showed up days before his official report date and upon his arrival hit the gym for a lengthy workout. Tulowitzki plans to keep playing shortstop - a position he described as “demanding, especially as you get older” – for the remainder of his career.

“I’m trying to do something no one’s ever done: be as big as I am and continue to play shortstop at the highest level,” Tulowitzki said. “I challenge myself every single day to keep this thing going.

“It’s something I take pride in and hopefully for my entire career I’ll be at that position.”

At six- foot- three and 205 pounds, Tulowitzki towers over the traditiona­l shortstop.

While Tulowitzki has struggled to stay healthy recently – he tore his left hip labrum in 2014, cracked his shoulder blade in 2015, and missed three weeks with a right quad strain in 2016 – the 11- year veteran said having a strong mental approach has made the difference in his career.

“I’ve had years where I’ve had to grind every single day,” he said. “I’ve had years I felt good all the way through, I’ve had times when I’ve had to have surgery and back off, so you never know what you’re going to go through, and that’s where being mentally strong comes in to play. That’s how you get to play this game for a long time. Being faced with diversity and getting back up.”

Tulowitzki said he hasn’t changed much in terms of his off- season preparatio­n over the years. He’s grown accustomed to a routine and sticks with it. It’s served him well so far. Tulowitzki has a .292 career average and .364 on- base percentage over 1,220 games. But what he prides himself on most is his reputation as a stellar defensive shortstop.

“When the ball’s hit to me I want not only our coaches to put their heads down ( because they know) the innings’s over but anyone who watches the game,” said Tulowitzki, who had a .983 fielding percentage last season. “That’s what I try to bring on a day- to- day basis, that consistenc­y.”

Toronto manager John Gibbons can appreciate what Tulowitzki has brought to his team over the last two seasons.

“He’s been great,” Gibbons said. “A big part of pitching success is catching the ball behind them. Tulo, he’s not a flashy guy, just a blue- collar guy, goes out there and does his job and really no one does it better.”

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