The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Super-utes’ struggles could prove costly

- Mark Bradley Only In The AJC

Every good team needs a super-ute.

The Cubs have Ben Zobrist, the paradigm for 21st century utility players. The Astros had Marwin Gonzalez, now with the Twins. The Dodgers have a roster full of guys who can swing between positions, up to and including presumptiv­e MVP Cody Bellinger, who plays first base, center field and right field.

The Braves entered 2019 believing they had two superutes. It was one of the few things they got wrong. Johan Camargo and Charlie Culberson have been disappoint­ments.

Camargo was sent to Gwinnett in mid-August, even as regular shortstop Dansby Swanson was on the injured list. Culberson has started only 15 games this season; last year he started 49.

Camargo’s problem was that, after losing his regular third base gig with the arrival of Josh Donaldson, he stopped hitting. He batted .246 in April, .186 in May, .190 in July and .176 in August. (He has been better since his Sept. 1 recall.) As of Thursday, his WAR (wins above replacemen­t) value was minus-0.8. As a fulltimer last year, his WAR was 3.7 – fourth-best on a team that won the National League East.

Culberson’s issue was he became the second of two superutes, meaning he was relegated to late-inning defense. He had 11 at-bats in April, 34 in June and July combined. Afforded more duty with the injuries to Swanson, Nick Markakis and Ender Inciarte in August, Culberson hit .196 with an OPS of .400, which is terrible. His WAR is 0.2; last year it was 1.3.

The failings of Camargo, who was placed on the IL with a right shin fracture, and Culberson forced the Braves to sign shortstop Adeiny Hechavarri­a, who’d been cut by the Mets, and promote Rafael Ortega, who’d spent the season in Triple-A, to fill August holes. Hechavarri­a and Ortega provided key hits as the Braves began to pull away in the East. It will be interestin­g to see if one or both makes the postseason roster.

If there’s a lesson here, it’s a basic one. Super-utility players are valuable because true versatilit­y is hard to find. Not only must a superute play several positions, he also needs to hit whenever he plays. Hitting is harder when at-bats come by the week, as opposed to the day.

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