New York Post

ELLSBURY ON CENTER STAGE

Jacoby determined to earn his money, silence the haters

- By GEORGE A. KING III george.king@nypost.com

TAMPA — Yankees fans no longer have Alex Rodriguez and, to a lesser degree, Mark Teixeira to shower with hate.

The Baby Bombers haven’t failed in the clutch enough to draw their wrath, Brett Gardner is a fan favorite and Chase Headley and Starlin Castro are complement­ary players.

That leaves Jacoby Ellsbury without cover in center field as the Yankee most likely to be smothered by criticism if the upcoming season turns sour.

The reason is two-fold. First, Ellsbury has hit .264 in three seasons with the Yankees, 22 points below his career average. Next is that seven-year contract for $153 million that has, counting this season, four years and $84 million left. The length and dollars make it hard to envision a team being interested in making a deal for Ellsbury, who has a full no-trade clause, after another pedestrian performanc­e in 2017.

Before Ellsbury arrived in camp Tuesday after his wife, Kelsey, gave birth to the couple’s second daughter, Crew, general manager Brian Cashman and manager Joe Girardi both said they believe Ellsbury has more to contribute to the team that needs a lot of things to go right in order to contend for a postseason ticket.

Ellsbury hadn’ t heard the remarks but didn’t agree or disagree when relayed to him Wednesday at George M. Steinbrenn­er Field.

“I am always trying to get better every season. Continue to do the little things in the offseason and continue into spring training,’’ Ellsbury said. “I worked hard this offseason and hope it pays off.’’

Considerin­g the amount of youth the Yankees are counting on. they must have solid years from Matt Holliday, Ellsbury, Headley, Castro and Gardner in order to contend.

When they signed Ellsbury following a 2013 season in which he batted .298, scored 92 runs, led the AL with 52 steals in 56 attempts and posted a .355 on-base percentage for the World Series-winning Red Sox, the Yankees believed pairing him with Gardner atop the lineup would give them the type of speed Chuck Knoblauch and Derek Jeter provided from 1998-2001 when the Yankees copped three World Series titles and came within an out of a fourth.

But since that big season in 2013, Ellsbury has swiped 39 bases in 2014, 21 in 2015 and 20 a year ago.

Now, at 33, it’s fair to wonder if Ellsbury’s days as an elite base stealer are finished.

“It’s all about opportunit­ies, and with a young team we might have more opportunit­ies than we did last year,’’ Ellsbury said. “I still have speed and still have explosiven­ess. I try not to look at age.’’

As for attempting to live up to the contract, Ellsbury simply said he is trying to be the best player he can be.

Then there is where Ellsbury will hit in the lineup. Girardi said he won’t use Ellsbury and Gardner back-to-back in the ninth and first spots, but left it open for them to hit first and second or other places.

“I haven’t talked to Joe yet and I haven’t really thought about it yet,’’ said Ellsbury, who led off 81 games and hit second in 57 last year. Gardner hit first in 80 games and was second in 58. “In the offseason you work on your skills. I am sure Joe and I will have a conversati­on about that.’’

Hitting coach Alan Cockrell already has discussed getting Ellsbury out in front of the ball by moving his contact point up three to four inches. Ellsbury reached first base a dozen times via catcher’s interferen­ce last year to set the MLB season record. Since 2007 he has led the majors with 26 catcher interferen­ces.

“Inches or whatever, we don’t talk about that too much. Just be ready to hit and do the simple things,’’ Ellsbury said. “When I am going well I can go well for a long time. I feel like I never got a real hot streak last year.’’

 ??  ??
 ?? N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg ?? CENTER OF ATTENTION: Jacoby Ellsbur y shags flies after arriving at training camp Tuesday. Both Joe Girardi and Brian Cashman say they expect more out of Ellsbury, who has underachie­ved in his first three seasons with the Yankees.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg CENTER OF ATTENTION: Jacoby Ellsbur y shags flies after arriving at training camp Tuesday. Both Joe Girardi and Brian Cashman say they expect more out of Ellsbury, who has underachie­ved in his first three seasons with the Yankees.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States