The Mercury News

A voice of maturity? Puig is mentoring the young Reds

- By Andy McCullough Los Angeles Times

The prospects gathered in the outfield grass around the veteran. For more than an hour Wednesday, as the rest of the Cincinnati Reds filtered into their clubhouse, a few young players received a tutorial on the path to big league success. The lesson came from an instructor dubbed, in the words of one Reds staffer, “coach Puig.”

Always catch the baseball with two hands, Yasiel Puig told them.

Never overthrow the cutoff man.

Always run hard when you leave the dugout to play the field.

And never, ever, try to mimic Puig’s own violation of these rules.

“I told the kids, ‘Do the right thing,’” Puig said. “Catch the ball with two hands — don’t do the same thing I do, because I catch the ball with one hand. That’s me.”

Puig listed a few of the other former All-Stars assembled on the Reds roster. “They need to take the good things that Puig does, Joey Votto does, Matt Kemp. Don’t look into the bad things that we do. Because everybody does bad things in baseball, and bad things in life.”

The good and bad of Yasiel Puig, the tempest who captivated Dodgers fans and exasperate­d Dodgers officials, now resides in the National League Central with the Reds. For the first time since 2012, the Dodgers opened camp without Puig. He had already arrived at his new home, a week earlier than position players were expected, along with the three other former Dodgers dealt in December .

The departure of Puig may still sting among the faithful in Los Angeles. Puig indicated he has moved on. He hopes to revive the Reds after four last-place seasons. Freed from his platoon role with the Dodgers, one assigned because of paltry production against left-handed pitchers, he expects to start in right field on a daily basis. He aims to thrive.

“I’m supposed to play every day,” Puig said. “All my teammates know, my coaches know, and everybody knows when I play every day, and I have more opportunit­ies, I can do what I do, and what I’m supposed to do. Like I do in the playoffs and the World Series.

“But I’m not the manager. I don’t make the decisions. I can’t do nothing about that.”

Puig indicated he bore no ill will toward manager Dave Roberts or the analytical­ly driven front office of Andrew Friedman. But he could not resist offering a reminder about who cranked the titanic home run off Boston Red Sox pitcher Eduardo Rodriguez in Game 4 of the World Series.

“I played good in the playoffs when I had my opportunit­ies

to face lefties,” he said. “I was hitting bombs in the World Series facing lefthanded pitchers.”

Those decisions will be less complicate­d in Cincinnati. The Reds lack the depth of the Dodgers, who mine the entirety of their roster.

Cincinnati won 67 games in 2018, 68 in the two prior seasons and 64 the year before that. The losing sapped the organizati­on’s morale, explained general manager Nick Krall. They could no longer abide being wretched. Aiming to compete in 2019, the team canvassed for starting pitchers. A discussion with the Dodgers involving Alex Wood expanded into a larger conversati­on.

As Puig’s name entered the talks, Krall tapped a knowledgea­ble resource inside his organizati­on. In November, the Reds had hired Turner Ward, the Dodgers hitting coach for the previous three seasons and the recipient of countless smooches from Puig. During his tenure with the Dodgers, Puig often clashed with coaches. He formed a more cuddly bond with Ward, who vouched for Puig to his new employers.

The trade itself was exotic. The Dodgers bundled Puig, Kemp, Wood and catcher Kyle Farmer, along with $7 million, in exchange for pitcher Homer Bailey and two prospects. The Dodgers released Bailey soon after, and used some recouped financial flexibilit­y to sign outfielder A.J. Pollock. The Reds rejuvenate­d their standing within the division thanks to the influx of former Dodgers.

Within 30 minutes of the trade becoming official, Wood received a flood of texts from his L.A. teammates. He fired off responses to Clayton Kershaw, Justin Turner, Enrique Hernandez and others.

Kemp praised his new club for its offseason additions. The rebuilt rotation will include Wood, Sonny Gray and Tanner Roark. New manager David Bell should have a productive lineup. The swing of Kemp could play well in the cozy confines of Great American Ball Park.

“And then you add the crazy man, Yasiel Puig, the Wild Horse, whatever you want to call him,” Kemp said.

Wood chuckled when asked if he had told his new teammates about Puig. “He’s

about to be a free agent, so he’s trying to have a big season,” he said. “With Puig, it’s just all about expectatio­ns. Puig’s got a big heart. He really is a good guy. He just is who he is. And you either accept it, or you don’t.”

Both Puig and Kemp were confined to places within a platoon last season. This decision stemmed in part from the abundance of players at Roberts’ disposal. The manager needed to juggle outfield at-bats among Puig, Kemp, Joc Pederson, Chris Taylor and Cody Bellinger, at a time when the Dodgers were competing for a division title.

So Kemp lost time after his production cratered in the second half. Puig often sat against left-handed pitchers, a nod to his .628 on-base-plus-slugging percentage against them. The shapeshift­ing nature of the lineup forced Roberts to manage personalit­ies as much as he did baseball games.

For Puig, a new day dawned Wednesday with clouds over the White Tank Mountains in the Salt River Valley. As the pitchers and catchers of the Reds held their first official workout, Puig and a few other hitters drifted to a back field for batting practice. A pop song from earlier this decade trilled over the speakers as Puig took his cuts: “Somebody That I Used To Know.”

Puig finished a round by scalding a pitch into center field. He chucked his bat into the grass and settled behind the cage with Ward. The music soon caught his attention. After a song by the Foo Fighters, the speakers played a commercial for Skyline Chili. Then another for Glassdoor. Puig spun around and gawked at the ads blaring in the midst of batting practice.

“Come on, man,” he grumbled.

A few of the other Reds cracked up as Puig shook his head. He was far from Hollywood, far from the ballpark he once electrifie­d, far from the teammates he once agitated, far from the place where he became a star. He saw no benefit in looking back.

“This is a new team, new city,” Puig said. “I’m going to leave the bad things, or the confusion, or whatever you want to call it, about what happened last year. That’s not going to happen this year.”

 ?? HARRY HOW — GETTY IMAGES ?? Former Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig was part of a fourplayer trade to Cincinnati in the offseason.
HARRY HOW — GETTY IMAGES Former Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig was part of a fourplayer trade to Cincinnati in the offseason.

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