The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mets slugger Cespedes says he expects to be ready for opener

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PORT ST. LUCIE, FLA. — Yoenis Cespedes expects to be ready to play by opening day. He said so himself.

Six days after saying he didn’t plan to speak to the media all season, the New York Mets slugger broke his silence Sunday.

Out of the lineup since July 2018 with heel problems, Cespedes said he planned to play in spring training games by the middle of March. And if all goes well, he intends to be in the lineup on March 26 when the Mets host the Nationals in the opener.

“If I continue progressin­g the way that I am, yes,” he told reporters through a translator. “I feel good. I’m happy with the progress. Every day I’m still working to get better and better. It’s not as fast as I want it to be, but as the season approaches, I’m feeling like I’m really good right now.”

Asked about his motivation level for this year, on a scale of one to 10, he answered in English: “Twelve.”

That’s a lot more than Cespedes said Monday, when he shut down media members who approached him in the clubhouse. “Not today, not tomorrow, not at all this year,” he said then.

The 34-year-old has played in only 119 games in the first three seasons of a $110 million, four-year contract, only 38 since the end of the 2017 season. The two-time AllStar outfielder was out for much of 2017 with hamstring strains, then missed more than two months in 2018 because of a strained hip flexor. He homered at Yankee Stadium in his return on July 20, then went back on the DL and had surgery to remove bone calcificat­ion from his right heel on Aug. 2, 2018, and his left heel that Oct. 26.

While recovering from surgery on his heels last May, Cespedes fractured his right ankle in an accident at his ranch just west of the Mets’ training complex.

“I am not going to speak about the past,” Cespedes said. “I committed an error and paid the price for it, but today I will be talking about the present and the future.”

Cespedes and the Mets agreed in December to an amended contract that cut his base salary from $29.5 million to $6 million. Cespedes would raise his pay to $11 million if he has one active day on the roster and to $20 million if he has 650 plate appearance­s — a figure he has reached just once.

“The money is important, but regardless I was going to come in with the same motivation whether the money was the same or any different,” he said. “The most important part, the big part of the motivation is the people who have been out there and have been saying that I can’t do it. So I’m going out there to prove that I can.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS 2018 ?? Yoenis Cespedes, who has battled injuries since 2017, says he plans to play in spring training in March, and if all goes well, he’ll be in the lineup.
ASSOCIATED PRESS 2018 Yoenis Cespedes, who has battled injuries since 2017, says he plans to play in spring training in March, and if all goes well, he’ll be in the lineup.

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