The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

McCaffery

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.274 and slugging percentage of .338.

Now, for a somewhat diminutive (5-10, 180) firstyear shortstop hitting out of the seven spot, those numbers are hardly atypical. For a player who looked like a right-handed hitting Chase Utley in the minors the past couple of years, they may be slightly disappoint­ing.

But disappoint­ment and negativity aren’t part of the landscape for both Kingery and manager/promoter Kapler.

“It’s been a process grinding out of that slump and I feel more hitterish at the plate,” Kingery said after getting a double among his four trips to the plate on this day. “For me, it’s not about results right now, it’s more about feel at the plate and having good at-bats. I’m not worried about the results. I know things will turn around and start to come for me. At this point, it’s about going to the box and feeling like I can do some damage.”

That “damage” assessment isn’t empty bragging. In his first full profession­al season in 2016, Kingery posted a .723 OPS while rising from high-A to Double-A Reading. Last season, he broke it big in graduating from there to Triple-A, hitting 26 home runs with 65 RBIs and boosting that OPS to .889.

Then Kingery simply tore it up at spring training this year. When his guaranteed six-year, $24 million deal — which also calls for three club option years that could total another $42 million — was announced in late March, Kingery was tuning up Grapefruit League pitching at .392 with four homers.

So it wasn’t a complete shock when the Phillies gave him the most guaranteed money ever granted to an amateur drafted player who had yet to play a major league game. Of course, that all-but guaranteed his promotion to the bigs at the break of camp, too.

“We had him up here because we liked him as a complete player and as a versatile player,” Kapler said. “And because we loved the athleticis­m. As he gets a little more comfortabl­e at shortstop that athleticis­m is coming out. And our staff and player developmen­t staff and some people who saw him in spring training rave about his defensive ability at second base. He could potentiall­y be an elite second baseman, but a lot of us think the same thing about wherever he plays and gets comfortabl­e.

“So I think what we’re starting to see is him just getting more comfortabl­e at shortstop and that athletic ability is shining and that quickness is shining.”

And yet, Crawford, who before Kingery was taken as a second-round Phillies pick in 2015 was this organizati­on’s star shortstop prospect and targeted Freddie successor (the Padres now thank him), continues to make progress in his ongoing rehab. He’ll be back here ... later or sooner.

But there was Kingery making three fantastic plays in two games earlier in the Toronto series, making a fast tag in time on an attempted steal by the Blue Jays’ Devon Travis in the fifth Sunday to make Andrew Knapp’s throw look great, and then making a diving stop of a one-hop shot to short before jumping up and gunning out Kevin Pillar in the eighth.

So aside from a little bit of struggling at the plate here early ... the dude is this team’s shortstop going forward, no?

“No,” Kapler said when asked about Kingery perhaps staying at the 6-spot on the field when fellow rookie Crawford is ready to return. “One doesn’t have anything to do with the other.”

So as far as lineup mysteries and Kingery intrigue goes, all is status quo. Nothing will change the constant state of change that thus far has defined Scott Kingery’s first Phillies season.

Which apparently is fine by him.

“I knew what my role was going to be coming in,” Kingery said. “I’ve been taking reps at every position, so I still feel good at all the positions. It’ll be a matter of looking at the lineup again and finding out where I’m going to play that day. That’s about the only thing that’s going to change (when Crawfords returns).

“I think it’s really good to be able to have guys like that, that can play different positions. So if they can just plug you in anywhere I think that’s good for the team.”

And so far, daily intrigue and all, so good for him.

Contact Rob Parent at rparent@delcotimes.com; follow him on Twitter @ ReluctantS­E

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