Truro News

Mccutchen eager for challenge of a tough right field in San Fran

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Andrew Mccutchen figures San Francisco’s AT&T Park outfield is so big, playing right field will make him feel like a centre fielder all over again.

Running catches, ricochets off the wall, tricky bounces and all.

And if he can save his legs a little bit from the action in centre, he might just steal a few more bases.

The Giants acquired the popular Mccutchen from Pittsburgh on Monday, and he will be their new starting right fielder. Manager Bruce Bochy quickly spoke to incumbent Hunter Pence about making the move from right to left.

“I’m looking forward to right field, that’s one place people can’t pick on me saying my defensive metrics are so bad,” Mccutchen said during a conference call.

“I’m looking forward to being able to play right field. I know there’s a lot of room out there to run. It’s definitely going to be a reminder almost like playing centre. I’ve gotten to see Hunter Pence patrol out there quite a bit so I’ll be able to pick his brain quite a bit to learn where to play and how to play, all those things.”

The 2013 National League MVP thinks he will be more comfortabl­e leaving Pittsburgh to join a clubhouse that has many franchise faces — that’s what he was for so long, after all — such as Madison Bumgarner and Buster Posey. He joins new third baseman Evan Longoria, acquired from Tampa Bay last month.

Still, this will be a big move for a player beloved in Pittsburgh. Mccutchen took the opportunit­y again to thank the organizati­on that selected him in the first round of the 2005 amateur draft for “having faith in me that I could be the player that they felt that I could be.”

“There are a lot of emotions that of course come along with this. I was there for nine seasons. You’re going to have those emotions,” Mccutchen said.

“A lot has happened. To put it all in a nutshell, we have a lot to be excited about and we have also a lot to be thankful for.”

Mccutchen has played at least 153 games in each of the past three seasons, batting .279 with 28 home runs and 88 RBI in 156 games last year.

But he has not been an all-star since 2015, when he was selected for the fifth straight season.

He will join a new-look lineup that includes Longoria, and Bochy is counting on both players to be steady run-producers.

“It’s nice to have these two names to pencil in there,” Bochy said.

Mccutchen is entering the final season of a US$51.5 million, six-year contract he signed in March 2012, a deal that turned into a bargain as he became a star and powered Pittsburgh’s turnaround. South Korean women’s hockey team head coach Sarah Murray speaks as she returns from the team’s U.S. training camp, at Incehon Internatio­nal Airport in Incheon, South Korea.

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AP PHOTO

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