Albuquerque Journal

Tebow feels like a baseball player

In major league camp with a reworked swing, majors remain the goal

- BY TIM HEALY NEWSDAY

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. — The Tim Tebow Show is back for a second season in Mets spring training, and the setting this time is major-league camp — as opposed to minorleagu­e camp with cameos in the bigs, as was the case for the quarterbac­k-turned-outfielder last spring.

The biggest difference between the two sides?

“Um, food,” Tebow said with a laugh Friday afternoon.

Tebow, 30, had enough to smile about after making his first start of camp, slotting in as the designated hitter in the Mets’ 2-1 loss to the Nationals at First Data Field. He went 1-for-3 with a line-drive single and also reached base on an error.

But it didn’t start well. Tebow’s first at-bat came against Max Scherzer, the reigning two-time NL Cy Young Award winner, and lasted about a minute. Strike looking, strike swinging, strike looking.

“He’s nasty,” Tebow said. “In a good way, I mean.”

Tebow followed with a single to left-center against Erick Fedde, considered Washington’s top pitching prospect. In Tebow’s last plate appearance, he fouled off five consecutiv­e pitches before sending a hard grounder to first baseman Jose Marmolejos, who booted it, allowing Tebow to reach.

“He has a good swing,” manager Mickey Callaway said. “He’s putting some really good swings on pitches.”

Callaway, as the Mets’ first-year skipper, has to take Tebow’s word for comparativ­e purposes. And Tebow made himself clear in saying that he feels far better this year than he did last year.

In addition to having a full season of profession­al baseball behind him, Tebow also spent much of the offseason reworking his swing, including with Mets assistant hitting coach Tom Slater. The hardest part, Tebow said, has been maintainin­g those changes while ramping up the intensity, from soft toss to batting practice to live BP to, now, exhibition games.

“I feel a lot more adjusted to the game,” Tebow said. “I feel like I have a very different approach and swing, so I can be a lot more patient seeing pitches and trusting all the work I put in.

“Just being able to see pitches, timing, having hopefully a cleaner path, so I hopefully have a little bit more time, buying time to see the pitch longer.

“It’s so much more natural, with mobility, flexibilit­y and the path and the work of the swing. I put in a lot of work this offseason.”

In short, Tebow feels more like a baseball player.

“He looks comfortabl­e at the plate, and he tells us he’s feeling more and more comfortabl­e,” Callaway said. “He feels like he’s in a much better spot than he was last year at this time.”

The Mets have not said where Tebow will open the 2018 season. After he split last season between low-A Columbia and high-A St. Lucie — batting .226 with a .309 OBP and .347 slugging percentage — Double-A Binghamton would be a logical starting point.

Don’t forget that general manager Sandy Alderson already said this month that Tim Tebow, major leaguer, could become a reality.

“That’s my hope, and to some extent now after a year and a half, a modest expectatio­n,” Alderson said.

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