The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Culberson comes home

North Georgia native (Rome and Calhoun) brings versatilit­y to Atlanta.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

If you’re not familiar with new Braves utility player Charlie Culberson, you certainly are not a Dodgers fan.

They know him well in Los Angeles, and some there hated seeing him included in the five-player December trade designed for the Braves to dump

Matt Kemp’s contract and for the Dodgers to move four players, including three with expiring contracts and big salaries.

Culberson, 28, was the other one they moved, the guy with neither a big salary nor an expiring contract. The guy who hit a couple of really big homers for L.A.

He’s not eligible for arbitratio­n until next winter, giving the Braves four years of contractua­l control and making it quite possible that Culberson — a father of three, and a North Georgia native born in Rome and raised in Calhoun — might be living 12 months a year for some time in the Marietta home

he and his wife were already buying before he was traded.

They’ll be about 10 minutes from SunTrust Park.

“I think things lined up pretty nice,” Culberson said. “Now we’ve just got to play baseball.”

Culberson looks so much like Braves shortstop and Marietta native Dansby Swanson — hair, beard, size, body type, face — that he estimates he’s already been asked about 20 times whether he is Swanson.

“I think I’ve got five years and three kids on him,” Culberson said, laughing. “It is funny, though. I’ve gotten it a lot. He’s probably gotten it, too. But I think with him already being here and being a Georgia boy and having the hair and the beard, a lot of people probably just think when I walk in that I’m Dansby.”

Other than being firstround draft picks from Georgia, there is little else similar about their careers that’s similar. Swanson played three years of college ball and was starting for the Braves at age 22 after playing less than a full season in the minors, while Culberson was in his sixth year of pro ball before he got his first major league call-up at age 23 with the Giants.

After playing parts of five major league seasons with three teams all in the National League West — San Francisco, which drafted him in the first round in 2007, Colorado and L.A. — he’s thrilled to be home and to be on a team where he could see more playing time in the first month or two of the season than he got in the past two seasons combined with the Dodgers.

He’s played mostly shortstop and second base in the majors but has experience at the infield corners and left field. The Braves had him working out just as much at third base as at the middle-infield spots in Monday’s first full-squad workouts.

“With our four-man bench that (versatilit­y) is huge,” manager Brian Snitker said. “Versatilit­y can keep guys around a long time and keep them a part of the team and a big part of the team.”

So can having outstandin­g reputation­s as teammates and hard workers, like Culberson does.

Here’s what Snitker learned asking others who’ve coached, managed or played with him about Culberson: “Awesome. Just really good, solid player. Great teammate — and I can tell that talking to him. He’s just a quality guy. Just visited with him in the stadium (SunTrust Park) before we came down here. It was good to get to know him a little bit. Just a pro. He knows his role and he’s going to be a valuable guy for us to have.”

Culberson bounced between the minor leagues enough times in the past five years not to take anything for granted, and said he doesn’t assume anything as far as a spot on the Braves opening-day roster. But team officials have made it clear it would take a surprising developmen­t for him not to be one of the Braves’ bench players, his versatilit­y and experience huge pluses for a young team that can use a guy like him to help set the tone.

Culberson has just a .231 average and .595 OPS in 197 games (443 plate appearance­s) over five major league seasons. He went just 2 for 13 in 15 games for Los Angeles last season — he spent most of the season in Triple-A — after hitting .299 with one very memorable homer and a .697 OPS in 67 at-bats for the Dodgers in 2016.

A first-round draft pick by the Giants out of Calhoun High School in 2007, Culberson was traded to the Rockies in 2012 and signed with the Dodgers as a free agent in 2015. He and his wife had a house in Smyrna the past four years and brought their growing family out west and on the road as often as he could in the past, but now they won’t have to make nearly so many travel plans.

While Culberson’s raw numbers might not look impressive, there have been moments the likes of which many longtime major leaguers have never experience­d.

Culberson hit the division-clinching walk-off homer in broadcaste­r Vince Scully’s final game at Dodger Stadium on Oct. 1, 2016, and he hit a home run in Game 2 of the 2017 World Series against the Astros and went 8 for 18 with four extra-base hits in 10 postseason games.

He was becoming a regular Big-Hit Charlie for the Dodgers, and new Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s, who was a Dodgers vice president the past two years, was thrilled to bring Culberson home to Georgia in the December Kemp deal.

He’s had some big moments, but now Culberson wants to experience the thrill of playing a full major league season and being an impactful player on a regular basis.

 ?? EZRA SHAW / GETTY IMAGES ?? Charlie Culberson hits a home run in Game 2 of the 2017 World Series against the Astros. Culberson went 8 for 18 with four extra-base hits in 10 postseason games.
EZRA SHAW / GETTY IMAGES Charlie Culberson hits a home run in Game 2 of the 2017 World Series against the Astros. Culberson went 8 for 18 with four extra-base hits in 10 postseason games.

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