The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Face of franchise plays third base

Freeman back sooner than expected from fractured wrist.

- FROMMYAJC.COM ByDavidO’Brien

The Braves surprised everyone Tuesday by activating slugger Freddie Freeman from the disabled list, one day shy of the seven-week mark since he fractured his left wrist.

Freeman and the team said last week the earliest the move might happen would occur during the Nationals series that starts Thursday in Washington and that Freeman might not be back until July 14 after the All-Star break. But like every other phase of his recovery, the minor-league rehab part was shortened to twogames, Saturday and Monday.

“He texted me (Monday) night and said, ‘I’m ready,’” Braves manager Brian Snitker said.

Freeman, who was initially expected to be out 10 weeks, was examined again Tuesday afternoon by Braves chief physician and hand specialist Gary Lourie and cleared to play. Snitker then penciled himinto the lineup for the opener of a two-game series against the Astros at Sun Trust Park, batting third and, yes, playing third base.

That’s his new position, at least temporaril­y, after Freeman suggested amove from fifirst base threeweeks ago so that hot-hitting Matt Adams could stay in the lineup.

“I texted (Snitker) last night after the game and said I was good to go,” Freeman said. “I felt good swinging, my wrist feels good. I probably swung more on Sunday (his day offff between rehab games) than I normally would on a regular day. That was a big tell for me, being able to swing back-to-backto-back days.

“My wrist feels good, and they’re obviously on board with it, coming back right now.”

Freeman said he intends to play every remaining game — “I’m not coming back to take a game off here and there”— and is confifiden­t the Braves can make a run at a playoffff berth. The team was 16-21 and eight gamesbehin­d NL East-leading Washington when he got hurt and went 24-20 while he was on the DL. The Braves remained eight games behind the Nationals before Tuesday.

“I hadall the confifiden­ce in the world in this team,” he said, “and obviously they’ve played so well, above .500 since I’ve been gone, and kept us right in it. We’ve got 81 games left, and you see (versatile veteran) Sean Rodriguez rehabbing, too; he should be back in the next couple of weeks hopefully, so we’ve got some guys coming in that will hopefully make our team even deeper than it already is. I think we’re set up perfectly, right where we need to be to make a run here.”

Freeman had just one ground ball hit to him in two rehab games at Triple-A Gwinnett, the fifirst times he played third base in games since doing it for fifive games in rookie ball in 2007.

“Right when I got that fifirst ground ball on Saturday, all the uneasy feeling went away, and when I started the game lastnight I was wanting them to hit the ball to me,” Freeman said. “That’s all I said from the beginning, that’s the feeling that I wanted. Obviously it was a Triple-Agame. We’ll see how I’m feeling in the top of the fifirst tonight. But that’s what I wanted. I felt how I feel at fifirst base, the feeling of wanting them to hit the ball to me.”

Freeman began taking battingpra­ctice last week in San Diego while accompanyi­ng the Braves on the fifirst part of a two-city trip so that he could keep working with infield coach Ron Washington. He is back sooner than even the most optimistic projection­s after fracturing a bone in his wrist in 12 places when hit by a pitch May 17.

“Remarkable,” Braves shortstop Dansby Swanson said. “It shows how tough he is. He takes care of himself in order to come back and be able to do his thing. We’re extremely happy to have him back, excited for things moving forward.”

Freeman said, “I worked hard and the medical staff, we all worked hard together. There’s a lot of hard work that went into it, and the will to come back as fast as I could played a big factor. I just wanted to get back as soon as I could.”

Freeman was asked if he had any concerns about coming back so soon and how he knew the rehab time was sufficient.

“My wrist feels good, that’s when I knew I was ready to go,” he said. “It’s not like a tendon or ligaments or anything, it was a fractured bone, and the bone feels good. I saw Dr. Lourie today and he said it’s the hardest (the bone) has been. That’s all I needed to hear. I know it’s not going to re-break unless I get hit again.

“So I’m going out there and I was standing in the box the last couple of games in rehab and had no worries about getting hit by a pitch. And that’s another thing — I had the ease of my mind going into the box, I felt good up there, I had no concerns whatsoever about my wrist. And that’s when I knew I was ready.”

 ?? SCOTT CUNNINGHAM/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Freddie Freeman fifields a grounder at his newpositio­n— third base— in the second inning of Tuesday night’s gameagains­t the Astros.
SCOTT CUNNINGHAM/ GETTY IMAGES Freddie Freeman fifields a grounder at his newpositio­n— third base— in the second inning of Tuesday night’s gameagains­t the Astros.

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