Chicago Sun-Times

BEST FOR LAST?

Chatwood says he’s primed to help rotation as he enters final year of lucrative contract

- GORDON WITTENMYER gwittenmye­r@suntimes.com | @GDubCub

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Nobody is suggesting Tyler Chatwood is the savior for a Cubs rotation that needs a big year for the team to return to the playoffs.

But after the Cubs lost Cole Hamels to free agency and added nobody to replace him, that’s exactly what Chatwood is going to get the chance to be.

Two years after the Cubs jumped the market to sign the hard-throwing right-hander to a three-year, $38 million deal to join the rotation, he looks like a guy with a second chance to be that impact addition in the last year of his deal.

“When I signed here three years ago, that was the whole point,” said Chatwood, whose historical­ly bad control problems led to a midseason demotion to the bullpen in 2018 after he had started for the Angels and Rockies. “That’s what I did my whole career.

“Last year was tough [in multiple bullpen roles], but the way I pitched at the end of the year I feel like set me up for a good year this year, and I’m excited to have that.”

Chatwood, 30, never has been confused with a command pitcher such as Kyle Hendricks. But until 2018, he kept the walks down just enough that his heavy velocity and breaking stuff compensate­d.

He missed all of 2015 because of a second Tommy John surgery the previous summer. He also had the reconstruc­tive elbow surgery in high school.

As he fought back to realign his mechanics and rediscover his feel, his walk rate rose in successive years until spiraling out of control in 2018 (8.2 per nine innings).

It’s why Hamels became a necessary acquisitio­n for a playoff contender in the first place, and why the Cubs felt compelled to exercise his 2019 option.

But the four-time All-Star and his considerab­le shadow are gone, opening a wide berth for Chatwood to get one last shot to be the impact free agent the Cubs thought they signed in December 2017.

Pitching coach Tommy Hottovy essentiall­y said the fifth-starter job is Chatwood’s to lose as camp opened. Chatwood’s primary competitor­s are right-hander Alec Mills, who thrived in multiple roles last year and could be a bullpen fit, and rookie Adbert Alzolay, who figures to fit best as a depth starter at Class AAA Iowa, where his workload can be monitored, as well.

And Chatwood, who pitched a scoreless inning against the Dodgers Sunday in his spring debut, might be in the best condition and mindset to finally reach his ceiling as a Cub.

“I think that bad year really helped me,” he said. “It could go one of two ways. You could sulk on it and feel bad for yourself, or you go back to basics and rebuild some stuff, fine-tune it. Last year was kind of the base of that. And this offseason I was able to build on that.

“I feel like this is the best spot I’ve ever been in, mechanics, throwing and everything.”

Chatwood went 5-3 with a 3.76 ERA last season in 38 appearance­s, including five spot starts and relief appearance­s ranging from one to four innings (with two saves).

He called it his “most physically challengin­g” season. It also was a season in which he cut his walk rate nearly in half and kept his mechanics in check enough to produce.

“I feel like I proved enough that maybe we can get back to that [original] plan,” Chatwood said. “There’s still a lot of untapped potential.”

He might not find a better time to tap it than this year, for himself and for the team.

 ?? RALPH FRESO/AP ?? Pitching coach Tommy Hottovy said Tyler Chatwood (above) is the leader for the No. 5 spot in the rotation. He’s battling Alec Mills and Adbert Alzolay for the job.
RALPH FRESO/AP Pitching coach Tommy Hottovy said Tyler Chatwood (above) is the leader for the No. 5 spot in the rotation. He’s battling Alec Mills and Adbert Alzolay for the job.
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