The News-Times

Gardner, Frazier build bond while competing

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In Brett Gardner’s mind, he’s a starter, even though he knows the New York Yankees project him as Clint Frazier’s backup in left field.

“I’ve always kind of gone into it with the mindset of having to fight for playing time, whether it was a young guy trying to beat out a guy like Melky Cabera or Johnny Damon, Nick Swisher, even guy like Bobby Abreu,” the 37-year-old Gardner said Thursday at spring training.

Gardner, the longestten­ured Yankee, returned for a 14th season with a contract finalized Tuesday. He mentors the 26-year-old Frazier, who last year put behind a 2018 spring training concussion and vastly improved his defense.

“He’s such a good teammate. He’s such a jokester, like he’s a little kid,” Frazier said. “I swear he’s more immature than I am. He makes you feel comfortabl­e, and he makes everyone around him better. There is still things that he can teach me as a player, teach me as a man moving forward.”

Gardner is the last link to the Yankees’ 2009 title. He hit .223 with five homers and 15 RBIs in 130 at-bats last year, rebounding after a slump that sunk his average at .169 at the start of September. He batted .369 (7 for 19) in the playoffs.

“I’m planning on playing every day,” he said. “And obviously that’s not realistic. And I know that’s not going to happen. But we’ve seen in the past guys getting hurt and things don’t always go as planned.”

While 5-foot-11, he has power and often was the only left-handed hitter in the batting order last year, at times joined by switchhitt­ing Aaron Hicks. Gardner jokes with Aaron Judge about his pop.

“I tell him all the time, if I was 6-7, 275 pounds, can you imagine how far I would hit the baseball?” Gardner said. “I told him I might hit 80 home runs a year if I was as big as he is.”

Frazier, too, is in a mood to yuck it up after years of adversity. Acquired from Cleveland in the July 2016 deal for reliever Andrew Miller, he has overcome cockiness, a collision with an outfield wall at Bradenton in 2018 and defense that reached a low point against Boston in June 2019 when he misplayed balls off the bat of Eduardo Nunez, Andrew Benintendi and Michael Chavis.

“A lot of expectatio­ns there, I think some unfair expectatio­ns,” Gardner said. “And when you have a young kid, just drafted out of high school, you forget that he hasn’t had a lot of time to develop necessaril­y in the minor leagues. And it’s hard being away from home for the first time and things like that. So I think that coming over to the team, it just took him a minute to get comfortabl­e and to be himself.”

Frazier was demoted to the alternate training site after the second game last season, on July 25. He returned Aug. 11 and came into his own.

Frazier finished with a .267 average, eight homers and 26 RBIs in 131 at-bats. He joined Baltimore’s Anthony Santander and Texas’ Joey Gallo as finalists for AL Gold Glove in right field.

“I think he had to shed the narrative that was probably a little unfair about him because one he’s always worked his tail off,” manager Aaron Boone said. “I think his confidence has really taken off. And this is the guy that hasn’t had anything handed to him. He had to scratch and claw and fight and earn his position.”

Frazier enters 2021 with 24 homers and 82 RBIs in 162 career big league games, acutely aware his career matches a full season. As his bat heated up, his personalit­y cooled.

He admitted “it definitely feels good knowing that whenever I walk into the locker room that I don’t have eyes on me for something that I possibly did that caused other people to have to answer questions “I learned to make it a little more of a mild version rather than a Tabasco hot sauce,” he said. “I’m still me behind the scenes, but I’m just trying to be a grown up and the best teammate that I can.”

Frazier credits Gardner with helping him through the tough times.

“There was obviously in 2019 a lot of discussion­s in the outfield where he was just trying to give any bit of advice he could on the mishaps that I was having in the outfield,” he said. “There was times when he pulled me over into his room just to put his arm around me and just to talk to me because he knew that I was going through some some tough times with some distractio­ns that I caused. And Brett’s just been a light that keeps shining really bright for me, and I’d selfishly like to have this guy around until he’s like 50 just so I could finish my career with him.”

 ?? Scott Winters / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images ?? The Yankees’s Brett Gardner, left, and Clint Frazier fist-bump after scoring during a 2019 against the Royals in Kansas City.
Scott Winters / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images The Yankees’s Brett Gardner, left, and Clint Frazier fist-bump after scoring during a 2019 against the Royals in Kansas City.

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