Chattanooga Times Free Press

Braves want Ruiz to fill gap at third base

- BY DAVID O’BRIEN

The immediate outlook for Atlanta Braves third baseman Rio Ruiz has changed dramatical­ly since 3 1/2 weeks ago, when he was struggling with a new swing and seemed on course to start a third season at Class AAA Gwinnett.

Ruiz’s production has improved sharply since that first week, which is fortuitous for him and the Braves because would-be starting third baseman Johan Camargo (strained oblique/back) is headed to the disabled list to begin the season.

Barring a late trade or waiver claim, the 24-year-old Ruiz is expected to be Atlanta’s third baseman on opening day and likely will get most of the playing time at the position while Camargo is out.

The Braves think Camargo should be ready the first day

he’s eligible to come off the DL (April 5), though that’s an off day, so his earliest game would be a series opener the next day at Colorado.

“Rio has worked his (butt) off the last couple of years. He’s getting better,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “You never know, situations happen, door gets opened and a guy doesn’t give it back. You never know.”

After starting 1-for-12 with eight strikeouts in his first five games this spring, Ruiz is 13-for51 (.255) with four doubles, two home runs, 10 RBIs and 11 strikeouts in his past 20 games,

though he is 0-for-5 in the past two. He came to camp confident after working with a renowned swing coach near his home in Los Angeles over the winter, but in the first week of camp the adjustment­s designed to give him more loft and help him hit more homers didn’t seem to be taking.

“In the first couple of weeks, it was just trying to find something that was going to actually work,” said Ruiz, 24. “I didn’t panic. Probably a lot of other people panicked, but I knew I was in a good spot. I was seeing the ball well, it was just a new swing, new everything. That’s everybody else’s job to panic and my job to just relax and try to put the bat on the ball.”

Beginning with doubles in consecutiv­e games March 1-2, Ruiz’s production and the quality of his at-bats has improved steadily. The left-handed hitter had a double and a homer last Saturday against the Philadelph­ia Phillies and an RBI double Wednesday against Detroit Tigers left-hander Francisco Liriano.

“He started not real good, but it’s how you finish,” Snitker said Thursday. “He’s made adjustment­s, and I know he and Seitz (hitting coach Kevin Seitzer) have been working in the cage and the whole thing, and he’s swinging the bat pretty good right now. He walked up there yesterday and hit a breaking ball nobody could see off the lefty (Liriano).”

An injury to his friend Camargo created an opportunit­y for Ruiz, though that’s not the way he wanted to get playing time.

“I want (Camargo) on the team,” said Ruiz, who also has played some first base this spring. “I want him healthy. I want him playing all 162 games because he’s that good a player; he helps this team win every single time he’s on the field.

“With that being said, we’ve got to try to go out and win games, and hopefully I’ll contribute to that.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Atlanta Braves third baseman Rio Ruiz focuses during a spring training game against the St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday in Jupiter, Fla.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Atlanta Braves third baseman Rio Ruiz focuses during a spring training game against the St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday in Jupiter, Fla.

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