USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Walker has ‘different feeling’

- Theo Mackie Contributi­ng: Nick Piecoro

It’s easy to forget now, but just 15 months ago Christian Walker’s future as an Arizona Diamondbac­k was uncertain.

Entering his first year of arbitratio­n off a season in which he posted a .696 OPS, there was a tangible possibilit­y the club would non-tender him. Even in March 2022, at the start of spring training, he recalled it as, “a suspensefu­l time,” and not one any player wants to relive.

It’s understand­able, then, that Walker describes this spring as a “different feeling.” Last year he went out and finished fourth in the National League with 36 home runs. He won a Gold Glove award. He was worth 5.1 wins – third most among first basemen and up from 0.5 the year before.

In arbitratio­n, he earned himself a tidy $6.5 million. Whether or not the Diamondbac­ks would pay it was never a question, because now Walker is a critical piece of their offense. When manager Torey Lovullo writes him into the opening-day lineup, presumably as the cleanup hitter, that spot will be seen as a strength for the Diamondbac­ks, not a weakness.

So yeah, this spring is a different feeling.

“Knowing that I can do it for a whole season,” Walker said, identifyin­g what feels different. “I was always confident about that and I always believed that, but it’s different when you see it on paper and there’s closure to it.”

Walker’s success also gave him a sense of importance to the team that he didn’t feel during the peak of his 2021 struggles.

“That’s a lot of my motivation, and whether it’s the right mindset or not, that’s what keeps me going,” Walker said.

That was true even during the first half, when his batting average hovered around .200. Although that number frustrated him when he looked up

and saw it on the Chase Field scoreboard, Walker knew the advanced analytics showed that he was producing some of the best contact in baseball.

“I felt like I was a key piece all year, regardless of the average,” Walker said. “Fortunatel­y, the slug was there even when the average wasn’t.

“As somebody who’s hitting in the 4 hole or the 5 hole, just to be able to help the team, period, and then having the defense on top of it, that was good for my brain, too.

“You want to feel like you bring something to the table. You want to feel valuable. You want to help the team. So to be able to check as many of those boxes as I can is the goal.”

This spring, Lovullo has seen that mentality manifest itself in Walker’s demeanor.

“He’s in a very relaxed state,” Lovullo said. “Very comfortabl­e with the foundation that he’s standing on. … It’s always where I’m trying to get to with a player. I want them to be impactful because they’re themselves and they’re relaxed and they’re just confident in who they are. Some players walk into this clubhouse on Day 1 and they feel that. Some players have to evolve into that.”

Still, Walker isn’t resting on the laurels of one strong season.

“To be able to throw it out there for one year is great, I’m

proud of it,” Walker said. “But now it’s like, do it again. And do it again and do it again and do it again.”

To that end, he’s spent his offseason working on getting to balls down in the strike zone. Last year, he made hard contact on pitches in the bottom third of the zone, but his launch angle on those balls was 10 degrees, as opposed to 24 degrees on balls in the top two-thirds.

“They would end up being ground balls, which are just outs,” Walker said.

To address that issue, he spent time working on mobility in his back and hips. By doing so, he’s been able to teach his body to move in new ways that enable him to reach those pitches. The process was painstakin­g – “take a swing, look at the video; take a swing, look at the video,” as Walker puts it – but there was a purpose to it. Those details, as nuanced as they might be, are what can enable him to replicate last year. They’re what can enable him to keep feeling important, keep feeling like he matters.

“For me to show up and ride out a good season last year and to not prepare the same way I did or not put in the same amount of work isn’t fair to my teammates,” Walker said. “That’s not what profession­als do.”

 ?? ROB SCHUMACHER/ARIZONA REPUBLIC ?? Christian Walker was nearly non-tendered, then ascended to be one of MLB’s best first basemen.
ROB SCHUMACHER/ARIZONA REPUBLIC Christian Walker was nearly non-tendered, then ascended to be one of MLB’s best first basemen.

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