The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hummer: How much hope to pack for spring?

- Steve Hummer

Braves rookie outfielder Ronald Acuna, the top prospect in Major League Baseball, is worth the trip to Kissimmee.

Braves pitchers and catchers report to spring training Tuesday, with the rest of the infantry required to be on the grounds five days later. This was thought to be their

last spring at Disney, but, alas, every building project involv

ing the Braves seems to be lagging behind the most optimistic of schedules. Be that team-building or the actual brick-and-mortar kind.

The Braves — the Amazon of North Port, Fla. — reportedly will not open their fancy, new research-and-developmen­t facility before the spring of 2020, full time. By then, we wonder, is it too much to hope

that a contender be training there?

For now, on former ranch land in Sarasota County, all

that’s growing are constructi­on costs.

On the familiar fields at Disney’s Wide World of Sports complex, who can be exactly sure what is going to sprout? The seed, we have been told for a couple of springs now, is of the highest grade. It’s just that the harvest has yet to make anyone really satisfied.

There has been just too much unsettled with this team’s management to believe fully that there is a single, unified vision for success. Too little belief in ownership to know for sure that this franchise

can make the step from promise to productivi­ty. Four consecutiv­e seasons of less than 80 wins will erode even the staunchest faith.

Here is one other parallel between the Braves and their spring-training constructi­on site: Just as there was a late change in general contractor for the North Port project, there also was a big developer change back at the team’s main office.

When GM John Coppolella got caught trifling with internatio­nal prospect rules — the hanging judges of baseball deeming it to be a felony worthy a lifetime ban — it was bound to throw the Braves builders off stride. The team responded, hiring Alex Anthopoulo­s and renewing its commitment to employing sharp, yet unproven, young execs whose surnames will fry a sportswrit­er’s spellcheck. Any certainty that Anthopoulo­s has the tools to finish the Braves rebuild is more wish than verified fact.

Truth is, you just don’t know. And, unfortunat­ely, the Braves have squandered so much of that benefit of the doubt they accumulate­d throughout the late 1990s, early 2000s.

As I pack for the trip south next week, there is no shortage of interest already folded and laid out on the bed. Spring training never fails to spark curiosity — and the day it does is the day to shutter baseball itself.

Ronald Acuna is in himself a novelty worth the trip. So intense will the vetting be that by the end of spring, the 20-yearold may qualify for a spot both as a Braves outfielder and as a CIA operative.

Beyond that, other questions will carry us all from here to March 29 and the opener against the Phillies: Where will all the young arms get slotted? Will there be a semblance of long-sought stability at third? Can Dansby Swanson get his groove back? Is there any reason to believe this team will make an actual measurable step toward competitiv­eness? To that point, I just don’t know how much optimism to pack for the start of spring. That is supposed to be an item as essential to this trip as the sunscreen, the tacky Hawaiian shirts and the Sun Pass toll transponde­r. And yet, as has been proved, such hopefulnes­s can be really uncalled for.

Oh, OK, throw some of that in, too. Can’t help myself. I always overpack.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Braves rookie outfielder Ronald Acuna, the top prospect in MLB, is worth the trip to Kissimmee.
CONTRIBUTE­D Braves rookie outfielder Ronald Acuna, the top prospect in MLB, is worth the trip to Kissimmee.
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