The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mets banking on experience of new team leader Cano

Second baseman brings with him a lot of expectatio­ns.

- By David Lennon

PORT ST. LUCIE, FLA. — Nothing is coincidenc­e in a majorleagu­e clubhouse, so the new tenant for David Wright’s corner locker at the Mets’ First Data Field didn’t arrive there by accident. The only person it could be was Robinson Cano, who moved in Sunday, carrying with him expectatio­ns that he never really had to shoulder during his nine years playing for the Yankees in the Bronx.

Starting at the age of 17, Cano was groomed to be Derek Jeter’s double-play partner, with the Yankees correctly predicting he would grow into one of the sport’s most lethal bats at the second-base position. But in nine years wearing pinstripes, a stretch that included seven playoff appearance­s, five division titles and one World Series title, Cano was annually surrounded by an All-Star cast, financed by baseball’s highest payrolls.

“They teach you how to be a champion from the minor leagues,” Cano said Sunday after his arrival at spring training.

But Cano isn’t a twenty-something MVP candidate anymore, insulated by Alex Rodriguez to his right in the clubhouse and Jeter to his left.

On these Mets, Cano — now 36 — is the superstar, no longer tucked away in the Pacific Northwest but back on a stage that’s mostly familiar yet still different in some significan­t ways.

And one clear distinctio­n is the need for Cano to be a compass of sorts for this Mets team, with Wright’s captaincy vacated and a group of younger, high-upside players that didn’t have the same winning curriculum in place. Not that Cano, in his first year, can be the presence Wright was as a clubhouse spokesman during his tenure. But as an eight-time AllStar himself, Cano has the stature to lead, and new GM Brodie Van Wagenen didn’t pick up the back half of his former client’s 10-year, $240 million to blend in with the rest of the cast.

“Nobody is going to replace David Wright,” Cano said. “I feel special that I get to have his locker. But this is a game you play as a team. I’m going to go out and do my best and give everything I got — yes, I will. But I don’t like to put pressure on myself that I have to go out and be that guy.”

Cano was suspended 80 games last season with the Mariners after testing positive for Furosemide, a banned diuretic that is used to help mask PEDs, so who knows what pressures he was feeling a year ago, even in a smaller market like Seattle?

Back in December, when the trade to the Mets was announced, Cano brushed aside the PED question by saying, “I want to focus on positive things. That’s a page I’ve turned already.”

If Cano struggles early, the subject is sure to come up again, but at least he’s well-equipped to handle the armada of reporters. It won’t be a new phenomenon for him, and that’s part of what makes the Cano trade more appealing from the Mets’ standpoint.

New York is an environmen­t that he’s accustomed to, and already succeeded in, so it’s not like Van Wagenen has to sweat any adjustment process. Also, as his former agent, you’d have to think Van Wagenen has a decent read on Cano’s mindset coming over, as well as the extent of the PED situation the player went through last season.

He also shared manager Mickey Callaway’s belief that the Mets needed someone like Cano to fill an apparent leadership void.

“We really did,” Callaway said. “David Wright, the captain, is gone now. To bring in a guy like Cano, a Hall of Fame type player, that does everything the right way, thinks about baseball in a winning sense. We talked to Robby about baseball and he talked about winning. That’s all he cares about. He’s going to be able to deliver that message to all our young guys.”

Cano didn’t have to stick around Sunday afternoon — the first official full-squad workout wasn’t until Monday — but he hung out in the clubhouse anyway, camped on the floor at the other end of room, next to the lockers of Jeurys Familia and his former Mariners teammate, Edwin Diaz. At one point, Cano called over Tim Tebow, and the group chatted for a while.

That’s the bonus behavior the Mets are seeking from Cano, aside from what they hope are the still glowing embers of those two Gold Gloves and five Silver Sluggers.

“Coming back here, I’m looking forward to being back in the playoffs,” Cano said.

For the Mets, the feeling is mutual.

‘I’m going to go out and do my best and give everything I got — yes, I will.’ Robinson Cano Now with the Mets

 ?? BOB LEVEY / GETTY IMAGES 2016 ?? The Mets acquired Robinson Cano, 36, from the Mariners because he’s an eight-time All-Star with the capacity to lead teammates, taught to play like a champion during his nine years with the Yankees.
BOB LEVEY / GETTY IMAGES 2016 The Mets acquired Robinson Cano, 36, from the Mariners because he’s an eight-time All-Star with the capacity to lead teammates, taught to play like a champion during his nine years with the Yankees.

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