Marin Independent Journal

Three position battles with opening day approachin­g

- By Shayna Rubin

MESA, ARIZ. » As spring training neared last month, the A’s were still searching for many answers to roster questions, with little solidified in their bullpen and no everyday shortstop in sight.

A flurry of trades and signings around the start of spring training put together much of the A’s offseason puzzle. With Elvis Andrus, Sergio Romo, Adam Kolarek and Trevor Rosenthal on board now, the A’s are looking almost complete.

But with a week and a half until opening day, roster spots and roles remain in question.

FIFTH STARTER » Mike Fiers, 35, was the presumed heir to the fifth rotation spot. But a lingering back and hip injury that required an MRI has kept him out of Cactus League play all spring and essentiall­y put him out of contention to start the year in the rotation. The A’s have plenty of options to back him up, though.

A.J. Puk hasn’t thrown more than two innings in a game since 2017; he got up to three innings in two spring training outings last March before his shoulder injury cropped up again. It’s notable, then, that Puk’s next step is to throw threeups (or face three batters in a simulated inning) this week.

“We’re building him up,” pitching coach Scott Emerson

said on Saturday.

Puk, 25, would be an ideal candidate to slide into the fifth rotation spot, or at least that’s how manager Bob Melvin and the coaching staff put it. Barring health and considerin­g pitch count as the A’s bring him along cautiously, it’s plausible that Puk won’t be ready for the rotation and may start the year out of the bullpen. He’s only appeared in two spring training games, on schedule to appear in three, before the season begins.

If Puk isn’t fully ramped up to start in the rotation when the season begins, Daulton Jefferies and Cole Irvin look to be next up to start a game or two in the first weeks of the regular season.

In four outings, including two starts, this spring, Jefferies has given up two runs on two home runs with 13 strikeouts and three walks. Getting a better handle on his slider has been a key developmen­t for the 25-year-old righthande­r with a mid-90s fastball and nice changeup.

Irvin is quietly having a stellar spring. The 27-yearold left-handed pitcher acquired from the Philadelph­ia Phillies is being built up as a starter.

He’s allowed

just two runs in 12 innings, which include two starts in four appearance­s. He has eight strikeouts and one walk this spring. Don’t count him out.

OUTFIELD PLATOON » The A’s outfield is pretty heavy on right-handed hitters. Ramón Laureano, Mark Canha and Stephen Piscotty are the decided regulars who go with an A’s roster always in need for some left-handed bat help.

The A’s took left-hander Ka’ai Tom in the Rule 5 draft this offseason. He’s an undersized outfielder who couldn’t quite crack the Cleveland Indians roster despite a .280 average with a .912 OPS between the organizati­on’s DoubleA and Triple-A teams.

As a left-handed batter, an outfield roster spot is Tom’s to lose.

The 26-year-old Tom missed the first few weeks of camp and Cactus League dealing with an oblique injury, but made up for lost time quickly once he returned. Tom is 8-for-16 with a home run, a triple, two doubles and two walks in five games this spring.

Tom is one of the few left-handed-hitting or switch-hitting outfielder­s who remain in camp after Skye Bolt, Greg Diechmann and Luis Barrera were optioned last week. Seth Brown is the lone lefty-hitting outfielder left besides Tom, but he hasn’t gotten consistent playing time. He has a .190 average in 21 at-bats this spring over 16 games.But Brown’s lack of playing time might have more to do with the A’s staff’s effort to jam-pack more at-bats and reps in the outfield. A Rule 5 pick is taken with the hope he’ll stick. Tom’s all-fields approach and sneaky power profiles him as a quintessen­tial A’s hitter undervalue­d by his previous team.

“For a little guy he’s got some juice in his bat, and that shows up in batting practice right away,” Melvin said Monday. “He can hit any number of balls into right field, and just looking at him you probably wouldn’t suspect that. It’s getting more familiar with his defense. He can play all three — at some point in time we’ll stick him in center.”

BACKUP CATCHER » Sean Murphy is the starting catcher. But his delayed start to camp after undergoing surgery on a collapsed lung this winter may force the A’s to slow his roll into the regular season.

Aramís Garcia, acquired from the Rangers in the Andrus-Khris Davis deal, could be first in line. He’s known for his defensive skills behind the plate, with the hope that his bat can catch up.

He showed solid pitch framing abilities in his time with the San Francisco Giants. In 2019, he converted 53.2% of 293 non-swing pitches into called strikes in the Shadow Zone, or the border of the strike zone.

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