The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHY CAN’T THE BRAVES FIND A THIRD BASEMAN?

Chaos is a constant in Braves’ 5-year search for stability at third base.

- Steve Hummer

Next year, Chipper Jones should be the last of the 1990s Braves to join baseball’s Hall of Fame. Tempus fugit.

His last game — the 2012 wild-card loss to St. Louis in which he went 1 for 5 and committed a devastatin­g error — was a nightmare. Everything before that was pretty good.

Everything since then has been as unsettled as Ben Affleck’s Facebook status at the corner of the field Jones homesteade­d for 18 years. The Braves after Jones have gone through third basemen like they were sunflower seeds.

Why, this season third base has not been a position so much as it has been a laboratory, the site of various mad experiment­ation. Just slap a tomahawk on a lab coat — that should be the new uniform of

the Braves’ third baseman.

Granted, the results have been interestin­g. We learned that Freddie Freeman is far more nimble than anyone suspected. Most athletes of his stature have to go on “Dancing With the Stars” to prove that point. All he had to do was to find a smaller glove and stroll across the diamond. So, consider his dalliance with third base informativ­e if not terribly useful.

And we learned Brandon Phillips is capable of swallowing hard and moving several steps to his right without his world collapsing. Adding to the resume is never a bad idea for a ballplayer of a certain age and contract status. Consider his shift from second to third the rarest kind of workplace training — it’s actually beneficial.

Phillips is one of six Braves who this season has appeared at third for at least 10 games. The roll call of those who have popped up at that corner for 10 games or more since 2013 stretches 17 names long.

Chris Johnson. Juan Francisco. Ramiro Pena. Paul Janish. Juan Uribe. Hector Olivera.

This is the result of the Great Hector Olivera Gambit so spectacula­rly blowing up in a firework of failure. He was the answer, obtained at great cost. Then he was the problem. Thus, third became a wound requiring many Band-Aids.

Alberto Callaspo. Adonis Garcia. Pedro Ciriaco. Kelly Johnson. Chase d’Arnaud. Gordon Beckham. Johan Camargo.

OK, you lose one third baseman, briefly it’s hoped, after he hurts himself hopping onto the field before the first pitch. Camargo’s injury this season hints that in addition to the Olivera hangover, there may be some kind of gypsy curse spinning the revolving door at third.

Rio Ruiz. Freddie Freeman. Jace Peterson. Brandon Phillips.

It has been rather amazing to witness, this transforma­tion of what was the Braves’ most stable position under Jones’ long tenure to what is now their most volatile one. Seeing how difficult Jones has been to replace should only bolster his Hall of Fame argument.

It would be nice, though, if the Braves could find a degree of constancy there sometime between Jones’ enshrineme­nt and the day he files for Medicare.

 ?? MIKE ZARRILLI / GETTY IMAGES ?? One of this season’s candidates atthird base was Brandon Phillips, normally a second baseman. Phillips is among six Braves to appear at third base in at least 10 games this season — and one of 17 to play there since 2013.
MIKE ZARRILLI / GETTY IMAGES One of this season’s candidates atthird base was Brandon Phillips, normally a second baseman. Phillips is among six Braves to appear at third base in at least 10 games this season — and one of 17 to play there since 2013.
 ??  ??
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM 2016 ?? The Braves considered Hector Olivera a possible answer at third base, but it didn’t take long for their plans to change.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM 2016 The Braves considered Hector Olivera a possible answer at third base, but it didn’t take long for their plans to change.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States