Houston Chronicle

Emotional Hinch focuses on good things

- Chandler Rome

On Monday morning, in the Houston humidity A.J. Hinch still calls home, he took a walk away from his downtown hotel — perhaps the only relaxation allowed in baseball’s health and safety protocols. The restrictio­ns prevented Hinch from visiting his home in The Woodlands and forced him into a hotel for the first time since the 2019 World Series.

Hinch often reserved a room downtown during playoff series. His stay Sunday carried none of the same stakes but somehow more emotion. Hinch is back in Houston in a baseball uniform for the first time since his abrupt dismissal last January, bringing the young Detroit Tigers to Minute Maid Park for a three-game series. He escaped the hotel Monday for a coffee. He covered his face in accordance with baseball’s protocols. Fans still stopped him.

“Recognizin­g me in a mask, I didn’t expect,” Hinch said, “but I got it.”

Awkwardnes­s and affinity shrouds Hinch’s homecoming. He is, by almost every measure, the best manager in Astros history. Any man with his accolades deserves a hero’s welcome back. None endured an ending like Hinch, fired due to a scandal that sullied his crowning accomplish­ment in baseball.

“I do have to focus on the good things that happened here,” said Hinch, who won 481 games and led the Astros to four playoff appearance­s in five seasons. “I have a lot of fond memories, a lot of incredible interactio­ns with fans and throughout the organizati­on. Some really, really good times and ultimately a really low time. I kind of embrace all parts of that in my journey through this.

“I do think it will be emotional for me. I wish I had a great quote or the words or the right thing to say about what I’m feeling. It’s different. Coming to the visiting site as the ex-manager is a lot different. Emotions will kind of be on full tilt.”

Astros owner Jim Crane fired Hinch and general manager Jeff Luhnow in January 2020 after Major League Baseball determined the team illegally stole signs at Minute Maid Park throughout the 2017 season and into 2018. The league suspended both men for a year. Hinch accepted the Tigers job three days after his suspension concluded.

Hinch said his relationsh­ip with the Astros is “fine” and that he remains in touch with Crane, who said he fired Hinch and Luhnow “for not doing anything about” the sign-stealing scheme.

“You don’t spend five years together and just simply walk away and not have relationsh­ips,” Hinch said. “I have a lot of people in the organizati­on I care about — a lot of players, a lot of executives. Jim Crane and I have stayed in touch. It’s a relationsh­ip that’s built over a long time, and they’ve treated me fine.”

Hinch said he spent his suspension “undergroun­d.” The league prohibited him from contacting anyone associated with the Astros while serving the ban. Only after the 2020 World Series concluded — and Hinch began interviewi­ng with the Tigers — did the flood of calls and text messages begin.

“We stay in touch,” shortstop Carlos Correa said. “We talked multiple times. I think it’s going to be very special to have him back. I think the fans are going to be happy to see him at Minute Maid. He did amazing things for his organizati­on, and I’m expecting big things when his name is announced.”

Correa is one of five active Astros who remain from the 2017 team. Fans are giving the club a brutal reception on the road to begin the season, focusing their ire on Correa, Jose Altuve, Yuli Gurriel and Alex Bregman. Hinch’s Tigers have had just one road series — a three-game set in Cleveland. Spring training in Florida also exposed Hinch to some fans still irate over his inaction in 2017.

Hinch said “people have let me know that they haven’t forgotten” but acknowledg­ed it’s been “nothing to the extent” that his former players have faced. Angels fans threw two trash cans onto the field during a game earlier this month, inviting some worry for the team’s safety as it embarks on a long road schedule.

“It’s something that’s going to be attached to all of us who were on that team,” Hinch said. “It’s our reality. We don’t have the right to tell people how to feel or when they’re done with it. Just continue to do good things and continue to be the best version of yourself, and hopefully, the sport moves forward.”

Reddick signs deal with Diamondbac­ks

Former Astros outfielder Josh Reddick signed a minor league deal with the Arizona Diamondbac­ks, he announced Monday.

Reddick will report to the team’s alternate training site and make $750,000 if he reaches the major leagues, according to the Arizona Republic. The 34-yearold veteran spent the past four seasons with the Astros.

After signing a four-year, $52 million deal befor the 2017 season, Reddick became a fan favorite in Houston thanks to his affable personalit­y and affinity for profession­al wrestling. He posted the best season of his major league career during the Astros’ 2017 World Series run but never found anything close to that consistenc­y in the three years that followed.

Though the Astros required outfield depth, a reunion with Reddick never seemed feasible. He penned a goodbye to Astros fans on Instagram earlier this winter, effectivel­y ending his tenure.

“Houston will always be special to me,” Reddick wrote. “From winning a World Series, to getting engaged and starting a family here and everything in between, I loved playing here and look forward to doing it again.”

 ?? Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er ?? Astros fans hold up a sign for Tigers manager A.J. Hinch during batting practice before the start of the former Astros manager’s first game back at Minute Maid Park since he was fired.
Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er Astros fans hold up a sign for Tigers manager A.J. Hinch during batting practice before the start of the former Astros manager’s first game back at Minute Maid Park since he was fired.

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