Chattanooga Times Free Press

Howard isn’t ready to put down his bat

- BY PAUL NEWBERRY

LAWRENCEVI­LLE, Ga. — Ryan Howard was once one of baseball’s most feared sluggers, an MVP, a World Series champion, the toast of Philadelph­ia.

So what’s he doing here in the sprawling suburbs of Atlanta, a 37-year-old minor leaguer playing alongside a bunch of 20-somethings while enduring bus rides and sparse crowds?

“There’s more in the tank,” he said bluntly. “If you walk away, don’t walk away with something still left in the tank. Then you’re wondering like, ‘Man, what could I have done?’ When I’m done playing, I want to leave it all out on the field.”

Howard certainly could have retired after an inglorious, injury-plagued, pitiable end to his Phillies career, more than content with a legacy that produced enough mementos to fill an entire room in his home. Many people, in fact, just assumed he was done after a rousing, retirement-like send-off before last season’s final game in Philadelph­ia.

But Howard wasn’t ready to walk away.

“It’s been interestin­g,” Howard said on a balmy spring afternoon while relaxing in the dugout at Coolray Field, home of the Class AAA Gwinnett Braves. “Once you leave the minor leagues, you want to not come back. But it’s the path that I’m on, the journey that I’m on.”

Signed to a minor league deal by an organizati­on that is among his former team’s division rivals, Howard has impressed the Gwinnett Braves with his work ethic, arriving early for games and going through every drill with his younger — in some cases, much younger — teammates.

Before Wednesday’s game against the Durham Bulls, he took part in two rounds of batting practice and hung out behind the cage with hitting coach John Moses, discussing the nuances of his swing. Howard also fielded ground balls and headed to the outfield to limber up with some strange-looking contortion­s and gyrations.

“He works hard, sets a good example for our younger players,” Gwinnett manager Damon Berryhill said. “He’s been a pleasure to have around.”

Howard is off to a slow start, hitting just .188 through nine games. He did launch his first homer of the season against the Bulls, a two-run shot that showed he still has some pop in that stroke, though hardly anyone saw it. The announced crowd was 1,295.

Howard is unfazed by the less-than-glamorous setting. His focus is firmly on getting back to the big leagues.

“Get your work in, do what you need do and get back up top,” he said. “I’m a little behind the curve as far as not really having a spring training, so you’re trying to get your work in, trying to work on things, and at the same time you’re also going out there trying to be competitiv­e.”

When Howard was called up to the Phillies more than a decade ago, he ushered in one of the greatest eras in team history with his prodigious power. Every time he stepped into the left-handed box, he extended his bat toward the sky with one hand, as if to indicate how far he intended to hit the next pitch. In 2006, his first full year starting in the majors, he put together one of the greatest stat lines in baseball history: 58 homers, 149 RBIs, a .313 average and an MVP award.

The Phillies went on to win five straight NL East titles, a stretch that included two trips to the World Series and a championsh­ip in 2008. Howard averaged 41 homers and 129 RBIs during that marvelous run, finishing in the top 10 of the MVP voting every season.

But his career was forever altered on the very last play of the 2011 division series against the St. Louis Cardinals, an excruciati­ng 1-0 loss in Game 5 that ended with Howard tearing his Achilles’ tendon while running out a grounder for the final out. He hasn’t been the same since.

Even so, Howard was the last remaining holdover from the Phillies’ era of dominance, a convenient symbol of what the team once was and what it had become. He hobbled through five seasons plagued by injuries, dwindling production and a rising chorus of boos from a fan base that once worshiped him. It finally ended with the Phillies declining to exercise a $25 million contract option for 2017 after Howard batted a career-worst .196 while still showing flashes of power with 25 homers last season.

“You don’t just write off something like that,” Howard said of his time in Philadelph­ia. “Obviously that’s something that’s been a big part of my life, my career. There’s always going to be that time to pay homage. But right now, as I’m currently still playing, you put that chapter behind you for the time being.”

Howard spent the winter waiting for someone to call. Then spring training passed with him still at home in Florida, working out regularly but looking more and more like the decision to move on with the rest of his life wouldn’t be his to make.

Finally, less than a week into the regular season, Howard agreed to a minor-league deal with Atlanta, one of the teams he had tormented for years. No promises were made — and certainly not for a starting job on a team that already has Freddie Freeman at first base.

But the Braves have a woefully thin bench, and the hope is Howard will show enough in the minors to warrant a call-up largely for pinch-hitting duties, not to mention serving as the designated hitter for a handful of interleagu­e road games.

It’s hardly the starring role Howard once played, hardly the career path he envisioned for himself. However, it’s a step he’s willing to take if it keeps him in the game.

“All you can do is just make the most of what you’ve got,” Howard said. “You try to make the most of where you are to get back to where it is that you want to be.”

That’s what he’s doing here.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Former Philadelph­ia Phillies slugger Ryan Howard is now in the Atlanta Braves’ farm system.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Former Philadelph­ia Phillies slugger Ryan Howard is now in the Atlanta Braves’ farm system.

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