New York Post

Prized prospect familiar with battle to make team

- joel.sherman @nypost.com

That was the last time Volpe had to fight to make a team. Until now.

The Yankees began spring training last month with a competitio­n for the shortstop job. There was a sense, however, that if the Yankees went with comfort they would just stick with Isiah Kiner-Falefa and if they went young it would be Oswald Peraza, who was a level ahead of Volpe in the minors and had a strong cup of major league coffee last year. Volpe, as of Friday, still isn’t even on the 40man roster. Michael Volpe mentioned that when he and his wife and the grandfathe­r for whom Anthony is named planned a trip at this time of year to spring training, they expected the games would be across the street at the minor league complex.

But they all were in attendance Friday at Steinbrenn­er Field when Volpe was leading off yet again. Peraza was on the traveling split-squad against the Orioles in Sarasota — with now utilityman Kiner-Falefa in center field. And Volpe did what he has done all spring. He looked like he belonged. He hit his third homer, a two-run blast to center off of Twins scheduled Opening Day starter Pablo Lopez.

It furthered the growing case that Volpe will be spending his Opening Day in The Bronx — playing shortstop against the Giants next Thursday. Peraza has not lost the job as much as Volpe has — day after day, event after event, game after game — left his mark.

“It’s my first camp,” Volpe said. “I don’t know how it works. It [trying to make national U.S. teams] helps me now in recognizin­g I have no control over [making the decision]. I am at peace with whatever happens as long as I feel like I worked hard and put my best foot forward.”

He has done that — as he did in 2018, when he was still young enough (17) that he could have repeated on the 18-and-under team the following year, too, if he had not been drafted by the Yankees. And Volpe did not just make the 2018 U.S. squad. With CJ Abrams, Corbin Carroll, Pete Crow-Armstrong, Riley Greene and Bobby Witt Jr. on the roster, Volpe hit third for a club that scored the most runs ever (131) for an U-18 National Team in an internatio­nal tournament. The United States went 9-0.

“He is who he is and it is hard to explain,” Ritchie said. “You can be around people who have the hunger for baseball. Anthony is not hungering to play baseball. He is starving to play good, winning baseball.”

Said Leggett: “He stands out because of how he plays. There is no second gear. He plays hard, unselfish, team-attitude baseball. He just wants to win.”

Again, sounds familiar since the Yankees are echoing what Ritchie, Leggett and the Team

USA infrastruc­ture say about Volpe. Words like “leadership” and “humility” come up a lot. Before leaving on the tour in

2018, the U.S. team was facing an accomplish­ed, older junior college squad, and Ritchie noticed in the first inning, after there were two outs, a few players collected their gloves. Ritchie made a point that the offensive inning isn’t over until three outs and he said he screamed, “What do we do with two outs?”

A voice rang out: “We score.” It was Volpe. It became the team’s mantra. When I asked Friday morning, “What do you do with two outs?” Volpe laughed and said: “We score.”

“He loves the game, his teammates and to win,” Ritchie said.

“He has a relentless willingnes­s to get better. And he can adapt quickly. He is just a sponge who can take informatio­n and quickly apply it. Then he wrings out the sponge and asks for more. So it does not surprise me that he has kept meeting the challenge.”

He might just make the team again.

 ?? Courtesy USA Baseball (3) ?? THE WILL TO WIN: After beating out some of the nation’s most talented young players to make the 2018 U.S. 18-and-under team, Anthony Volpe is attempting to land the starting shortstop job with the Yankees. “I just decided I didn’t want to go to Panama and I didn’t want to try to win a gold medal without Anthony Volpe,” his Team USA manager, Jack Leggett, said.
Courtesy USA Baseball (3) THE WILL TO WIN: After beating out some of the nation’s most talented young players to make the 2018 U.S. 18-and-under team, Anthony Volpe is attempting to land the starting shortstop job with the Yankees. “I just decided I didn’t want to go to Panama and I didn’t want to try to win a gold medal without Anthony Volpe,” his Team USA manager, Jack Leggett, said.
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