Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Oakland hopes Lamb is a diamond in the rough

A’s acquired infielder to offset loss of Chapman

- By Shayna Rubin Bay Area News Group

Jake Lamb had only known one team in his big league career. For six seasons the 29-yearold suited up for the Arizona Diamondbac­ks, and for some of those early years he was one of the game’s best young hitters. He was a 2017 All-Star, owner of a .248 average, .843 OPS, 59 home runs and 196 RBIs over the 2016 and ’17 seasons.

In 2018, the injury bug bit. He endured shoulder injuries that hampered his production at the plate. Things spiraled, to put it mildly, resulting in the Diamondbac­ks unceremoni­ously designatin­g their veteran for assignment in mid-September.

Lamb knew he wasn’t producing, but he didn’t see this coming. “The Diamondbac­ks were the only team I’ve ever been with, and the DFA was a bit of a surprise,” Lamb said. “But I got the call that this team needed someone.”

The A’s were all over it, signing Lamb almost to the minute he cleared waivers — there was little chance Lamb would be claimed given the claimer would absorb Lamb’s $5,515,000 contract. Things seemed to align for both sides. With Matt Chapman having undergone seasonendi­ng hip surgery and Chad Pinder hitting the injured list with a Grade 1 strained hamstring, the A’s were down to Vimael Machín and a little bit of Tommy La Stella as third base options with designated hitting depth against right-handed

pitchers down to a puddle. Lamb just needed another opportunit­y.

“Every once in awhile, you go to a new team, it brings that lift to you,” Mike Fiers, who’s changed teams a couple times in his career, said Wednesday. “New air of putting on a new jersey, it could change a bunch of things for a guy.”

But what can Lamb actually contribute?

If you open up Lamb’s indexed statistics online and take a quick scan, his last few years will give you pause. They may even ring a few alarm bells.

What are the A’s doing with a player who slashed .178/.308/.313 with 72 strikeouts and six home runs over his last 96 games (in the 2019 and 2020 seasons)? What can the A’s get out of a player with a -0.6 WAR and 14 wRC+ (the league average is 100 wRC+) with the Diamondbac­ks in a handful of games this year?

Can the A’s truly squeeze production out of a 29-yearold player that’s yet to regain his form after battling persistent shoulder injuries in 2018?

Perhaps not, but if his first few games in the green and gold are any indication, perhaps he can. His body of work pre-injury follows him. It’s been locked away somewhere.

In his first three games with the A’s, Lamb has five hits, including two doubles and a home run with three strikeouts.

Strikeouts were an issue for Lamb this year in Arizona; he struck out in 31 percent of his at-bats. Among qualified players, that would rank him among the top 15 for highest strikeout rate. Perhaps he hasn’t shown a tremendous amount of discipline in the small sample size.

What matters is that he’s shown the power potential he proved to have with the Diamondbac­ks. Underlying numbers show that during Lamb’s down years, he’s

hitting the ball as hard, if not harder, than he was at his peak. In 2019 and 2020, he’s averaging a 90.2 mph exit velocity; in 2016 he averaged 91.3 and 88.2 in 2017. That 90 mph average is about league average, and Lamb could find more success with that kind of contact.

Of all the contact he’s made, 12 of the results — both outs and for hits — have come off the bat above 98 mph.

Lamb, in a handful of games with the A’s, has shown that the Jake Lamb of three years ago isn’t lying too far beneath the surface. The A’s have a knack for dusting off diamonds in the rough, and Lamb has the history and tools to become another player revitalize­d in Oakland. If and when the A’s emerge into the postseason waters that have drowned them, Lamb could very well contribute as more than just an emergency depth piece.

Sometimes, all it takes is a change of scenery to bring that talent above water.

 ?? JACK DEMPSEY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? The A’s Jake Lamb is congratula­ted after scoring against the Rockies on Tuesday in Denver.
JACK DEMPSEY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE The A’s Jake Lamb is congratula­ted after scoring against the Rockies on Tuesday in Denver.

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