Baltimore Sun Sunday

Gentry out to ‘prove himself’

- eencina@baltsun.com twitter.com/EddieInThe­Yard

beating. He has dealt with a litany of injuries: fractures to both hands on separate attempts to bunt, a broken wrist while crashing into an outfield wall, and back, ankle and hamstring injuries. But it was a concussion Gentry suffered while playing with the Oakland Athletics in 2014 that sent his career — and life — into a two-year spiral.

‘A really bad depression’

On Sept. 9, 2014, Gentry dropped a bunt and sped to first, the kind of play he made hundreds of times in his career. But while racing to the bag trying to beat Chicago White Sox second baseman Carlos Sanchez, the two players reached first base at the same time, and Gentry’s head collided with Sanchez’s right shoulder, flipping Gentry into the air and to the ground.

By Gentry’s count, it was the sixth concussion of his playing career, and the physical effects of the ugly collision — headaches, dizziness and confusion — paled in comparison to the more detrimenta­l long-lasting effects of it.

“After this one, I just went into a really bad depression and really didn’t know where it came from,” Gentry said. “I couldn’t sleep. I struggled eating. … I feel like the physical symptoms of all of it were over in about a month or so, but I was dealing with other things outside of that. That took me a really long time to grasp because I really didn’t know what was going on.”

Other than the sleepless nights and the lack of appetite, Gentry struggled putting thoughts into words, and there was frustratio­n from not understand­ing being trapped in his own mind. Included in all of those hurdles was a lack of love for baseball. Every day was a struggle.

“Honestly, I wasn’t even sure if I wanted to play anymore,” Gentry said. “But I got provided the right help that I needed and provided the right opportunit­y for me. I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for my faith and the support of my family and friends and doctors.”

In part because of that, Gentry’s past two seasons have been lost ones. He was limited to 40 big league games, including just 14 with the Los Angeles Angels in 2016 before going on the disabled list for a lumbar strain in his spine and later an undisclose­d “personal medical condition” that included dealing with effects of his most recent concussion. The Angels released him in early August.

“People really don’t talk about it a lot, but it is real,” Gentry said. “And this stuff does happen, and it’s definitely a struggle. … It was a tough time, obviously for me, for my friends, my family, seeing me go through stuff like that and not really understand­ing what was going on and not knowing why.”

Still, Gentry went into the offseason thinking his career might be over. He was far removed from a three-year span with the Texas Rangers from 2011 to 2013, when he was a .288/.365/.380 hitter and averaged 18 steals per season while playing plus defense at all three outfield positions.

Unearthing a diamond

This offseason, something changed for Gentry. His treatment, the countless trips to doctors, seemed to be suddenly paying off. The long-lasting support he received from his family and friends seemed to rally him. He gained a renewed desire to play again, and just needed an opportunit­y.

Gentry had worked with Orioles hitting coach Scott Coolbaugh for several offseasons, and Coolbaugh noticed something different with Gentry this past winter, something that sparked the idea that maybe he could help the Orioles.

“Just his bat speed, his body, he looked healthier to me,” said Coolbaugh, who has known Gentry since his days in Single-A ball in the Rangers system. “I liked the way he was talking, he sounded very confident that he could get back and do some things if he was given the opportunit­y. When I was throwing to him, just the way he was approachin­g the offseason, I thought it was refreshing and maybe this was the time to grab somebody who was coming off two years of feeling he hadn’t done anything, and he wanted to prove himself again.”

Gentry also had a close friend in Orioles first baseman Chris Davis. The two were in the same Rangers draft class in 2006. They were roommates while playing for Short-A Spokane, and became fast friends, living together in the offseason for several years while remaining workout partners despite their careers taking them to different organizati­ons.

“He’s had a lot of obstacles to overcome the past few years and just a lot of bad luck,” Davis said. “I felt like it was definitely time for him to catch a break. … It would have been easy to just say, ‘Look, I don’t want to deal with this,’ to walk away from everything. But that’s just not who he is.”

Gentry said his recovery had included a lot of trips to various doctors, and has tested his faith. He said he started feeling better around November. There was no expectatio­n from Gentry, Coolbaugh said. He didn’t need a guaranteed deal. All he wanted was to prove himself.

Coolbaugh played an instrument­al role in the Orioles signing Gentry, campaignin­g for the organizati­on to bring him in on a minor league deal.

“He’s got that look back,” Showalter remembers Coolbaugh telling him. “I think he’s ready.”

“That’s where some of the best decisions and additions are made,” Showalter said, “when you have a background and you know what’s been going on the past two years and you have somebody who speaks to them face to face instead of [going by what’s] on a computer and looking at numbers. That’s where you make real decisions and you do something that people can’t quantify, and Gentry’s one of those guys.”

The Orioles believed that if Gentry was finally healthy he could add speed, defense and on-base capabiliti­es the club needed. And because the Orioles have familiar faces from Gentry’s Rangers days — he played with Davis and reliever Darren O’Day, and under Coolbaugh and first base-outfield coach Wayne Kirby — it would ease his transition.

Taking advantage

Gentry made an impact immediatel­y, from his first intrasquad game in an Orioles uniform, making a running catch on a foul ball down the first base line while crashing into the stands.

At the plate, Gentry entered Saturday night’s game 13-for-42 this spring, hitting .310/.408/.500 with two homers, seven RBIs and three stolen bases while playing exceptiona­l defense all over the outfield.

“He brings a dynamic to our team that we’ve needed for a few years now, and I think this will be good for not only us but for him as well,” Davis said. “I’m just excited to see how much impact it has on our team. Because it’s not like we don’t have guys who can run. We have guys who can run the bases and have some speed. We just don’t have that stolen base threat. That’s no secret.”

Now, Gentry has emerged from a crowded outfield mix to become a favorite to win one of the team’s last 25-man roster spots. His career .350 on-base percentage against lefthander­s slots him as one the team’s right-handed-hitting outfielder­s.

Because Gentry is on a minor league deal, they could send him to Triple-A Norfolk to open the season. He doesn’t have an opt-out clause in his contract until mid-June, but with spring training winding down, there’s not much more he could do to prove he deserves to run down the orange carpet Opening Day.

“There’s a process you go [through sometimes],” Showalter said. “The safe thing is to have him go down to Norfolk and show you that, but there’s a window. … Sometimes that stuff with concussion­s and everything is as much emotional and psychologi­cal as it is a physical injury. … We did a lot of homework. The doctors spent a lot of time with him before we brought him in here. We’ll see. That’s going to be a tough one because the numbers are [still] challengin­g.”

Gentry had never talked about all the obstacles — including the concussion­s — he faced as a result of the concussion­s. But he hopes opening up out about them now can help other players who have endured similar setbacks.

“I feel like I’ve done what I’ve needed to do to get back and [I’m] not saying it’s not still a struggle, but I feel like I’m in a better place with all of that,” Gentry said. “I feel like I’m physically and mentally behind me, but yeah, when you go through something like that, especially with the amount of concussion­s I’ve had, it can be a struggle and it was a struggle for me. I’m just glad that, especially after all that, I’m ecstatic to be here because I did not know if this opportunit­y was going to present itself.

“But looking back on it, I don’t think I would take it back because a lot of good things came from it in the long run . ... This has made me a much better man, a much better father, a much better husband, a much better friend and a much better person. That’s why I feel like I’m not here for no reason.”

 ?? JUSTIN K. ALLER/GETTY IMAGES ?? After two years dealing with injuries, primarily severe effects from his sixth career concussion, Craig Gentry is a favorite to win a spot with the Orioles.
JUSTIN K. ALLER/GETTY IMAGES After two years dealing with injuries, primarily severe effects from his sixth career concussion, Craig Gentry is a favorite to win a spot with the Orioles.

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