Times Standard (Eureka)

A’s excited Andrus can help them in many ways

- By Jacob Rugner

When the Oakland Athletics traded designated hitter Khris Davis to the Texas Rangers in exchange for 12-year veteran shortstop Elvis Andrus, A’s manager Bob Melvin quickly saw an opportunit­y present itself.

Andrus, a career .274 hitter with 305 stolen bases, possesses the ability to contribute through his offensive and defensive production.

Perhaps more importantl­y though, Melvin saw another layer to Andrus’ potential offering. He sees him as someone capable of passing more than a decade of knowledge down to the A’s younger players.

“Having him as a resource is terrific,” Melvin said. “He’s a veteran guy.”

Melvin’s view of Andrus’ prospects as a leader stems from his familiarit­y with the former Ranger infielder. Having both spent more than a decade in the AL West, Melvin has picked up on some of Andrus’ tendencies and he’s confident Andrus has honed in on some of the Athletics’ moves.

Melvin has Andrus on his side now. He sees a chance to improve his team as a result.

“Elvis has played against us for a long time,” Melvin said. “He’s seen our guys and he’s got some opinions. He may have some things that we didn’t know.”

Andrus is coming off a down year. Hampered by a back injury through the 2020 season, he hit .194 in 29 games, marking the first time in his career that his batting average dipped below .200. Defensivel­y, Andrus struggled as well. In outs above average, which calculates the number of plays a defender made and the difficulty of them, Andrus ranked No. 219 of 244 players. Only five shortstops finished the season ranked lower than him in the category.

Melvin believes Andrus’ lack of offensive production can be attributed to the injury, though. The 32-year-old’s new teammates are confident he’ll be able to find his stride again in Oakland.

“We’re getting a bat, you know,” Laureano said. “He’s been in the World Series twice. He’s been in the playoffs a bunch of times. He already played with one of the best third basemen in the history of the game (Adrian Beltre) and he’s playing with one of the best current third basemen in the game (Matt Chapman).”

Before last season, Andrus had proven himself as a threat at the plate and on the basepaths. In 12 seasons, he’s stolen fewer than 20 bases in a year just twice, an aspect of his game that Melvin feels the

team can capitalize on in the upcoming campaign.

“He’s a guy that not only is a good runner and a base-stealer,” Melvin said, “He’s pretty aware of when he needs to steal and can pick up things for some of our guys.”

Baserunnin­g is one of the areas Laureano has chosen to focus on in his conversati­ons with Andrus

over the course of the last week. The A’s center fielder is coming off his least productive season on the bases in his three-year career. With a proven base-stealer now in his locker room, Laureano believes he and his teammates can improve their own skill sets.

“We’re going to learn a lot from him,” Laureano

said. “Not only defensivel­y for the infielders but the whole group.”

Melvin is confident that his team added a contributo­r on the field if Andrus is healthy. Either way, the A’s manager knows he added an important presence off it.

“He’s like a point guard,” Melvin said. “He’s got a great sense for the game.”

 ?? OAKLAND ATHLETICS — CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The Oakland Athletics’ new shortstop Elvis Andrus bats during spring training last week in Scottsdale, Ariz.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS — CONTRIBUTE­D The Oakland Athletics’ new shortstop Elvis Andrus bats during spring training last week in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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