The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Rosario finds fit and family with Indians

- By Tom Withers

Once adversarie­s, Eddie Rosario and Indians manager Terry Francona are now allies.

So when Rosario, who spent the past six seasons hammering Cleveland pitchers while in Minnesota, sat down with Francona at spring training camp in Arizona for the first time last week, the free-swinging outfielder received a warm, if not awkward, welcome.

“I told him it is so nice not to hate you anymore,” Francona cracked.

Smashing eye-level pitches out of the strike zone and ones just inches above his cleats, Rosario tormented the Indians while with the Twins. He batted .353 with 11 homers, 12 doubles and three triples — his most in any ballpark — in games at Progressiv­e Field, his new home.

A free agent this winter, the 29-year-old Rosario signed a one-year, $8 million contract with the Indians in December, joining a team he battled regularly and one desperate to fill a power void in its lineup following the departures of All-Star shortstop Francisco Lindor and slugger Carlos Santana.

Francona no longer has to tense up every time he sees Rosario stroll toward the batter’s box.

“He just seemed to wreak havoc,” Francona said. “And now go ahead and wreak it all you want. We’ll cheer for you and pat you on the back. We got a good laugh out of that. He seems like a really good kid. He seems excited to be here.”

Rosario is genuinely thrilled to be joining the Indians, who finished one games behind Minnesota last year in the AL Central.

It’s a new start, but also a familiar one.

“I played a lot against this club,” Rosario said. “I love playing at Progressiv­e Field in Cleveland. I love the stadium and I hit it well. I see the ball really good. I like the team, too. I have a couple of friends here. I feel happy to be here.”

After the Twins decided not to re-sign Rosario, who hit 13 homers in 57 games last season and 32 in 2019, he began looking for a team that fit his needs. He wanted to play for a contender and with like-minded players. The Indians checked both those boxes.

“I think for me it was more like looking for a family,” Rosario said. “People that I am familiar with; people that have seen me play. Tito has seen me play for a couple of years, playing against me while I was in Minnesota. I have a couple of fellow countrymen from Puerto Rico on this team so this is a great opportunit­y for me.

“I was looking for a place where I felt comfortabl­e playing, a ballpark I know, a place where I can have my best game and I felt the Indians were the best match for me.”

Rosario can play both corner outfield spots, but he’s spent more time in left and that’s where Francona intends to play him. While he may be better known for his offensive prowess, Francona said Rosario is more than adequate defensivel­y.

“He throws fine,” Francona said.

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