New York Daily News

D’Arnaud still

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATLANTA — Travis d'Arnaud's career appeared to be winding down. He missed nearly an entire season after blowing out his elbow. He was cut by the Mets and dumped by the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Now, he's back on track. At age 30, d'Arnaud has a prosperous new lease on his baseball life after agreeing to a $16 million, two-year contract with the NL East champion Atlanta Braves, his reward for an unexpected comeback season with the Tampa Bay Rays in 2019.

“I feel like I've got a lot of years left,” the catcher said Monday during a conference call. “I want to keep getting better and become the player I'm supposed to be.”

D'Arnaud, a first-round pick by the Philadelph­ia Phillies who made it to the majors with the New York Mets, played only four games in 2018 before Tommy John surgery on his right elbow.

He returned last season but struggled mightily, hitting .083 in 10 games before he was let go by the Mets. He signed with the Dodgers, getting only a single at-bat before they shipped him to the Rays for $100,000.

In Tampa Bay, d'Arnaud regained his form. In 92 games, he matched his career high with 16 homers and tallied 67 of his career-best 69 RBI for the season. The Rays earned an AL wild-card berth, knocking off Oakland before they were eliminated by Houston in a five-game AL Division Series.

“I will be forever grateful to that organizati­on for giving me a chance to play again,” d'Arnaud said of the Rays. “I hope nothing but the best for everybody there. They have a very bright future.”

D'Arnaud's future is in Atlanta, where he will be paired with Tyler Flowers in a catching arrangemen­t that the Braves hope will be as effective as the ones they've

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