Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Johnson confident of mound rebound

Former Jay lands deal with Padres

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PEORIA, Ariz. — Asked how miserable he was in a 2013 season in Toronto filled with arm pain and hard-hit balls, Josh Johnson chuckled and shook his head.

“Miserable might be an understate­ment,” Johnson said Friday. “It was like two innings and all of a sudden eight runs are on the board. I had no idea what was going on. It was crazy.”

The right-hander was able to crack a smile in part because he has a surgically repaired elbow and a fresh start with the San Diego Padres, a combinatio­n he hopes will help him return to the form that included two all-star selections and a National League-best 2.30 ERA with the Marlins in 2010.

“Before he got hurt, to me, he was the most dominating pitcher in the National League and probably in the major leagues,” said Joaquin Benoit, another of the Padres’ off-season pitching acquisitio­ns. “It will be really good if he’s healthy. He’s going to be a really big piece for our rotation.”

That’s the plan for the normally thrifty Padres, who opened spring training Friday with the first workout for pitchers and catchers sporting a new look and a higher payroll.

The Padres signed Benoit away from Detroit with a two-year, $15.5 million deal to be their setup man, and inked Johnson to a one-year, $8 million deal after his terrible season with the Blue Jays in hopes he can be an anchor in their rotation.

“Physically, mentally he’s in a good spot,” manager Bud Black said of Johnson.

That was not the case last year, or the past few seasons.

After going a combined 2611 with 377 strikeouts for the Marlins in 2009-10, he had his season cut short a year later with shoulder trouble. He went just 8-14 with a 3.81 ERA in 2012 before he was traded to the Blue Jays after the season.

The 6-foot-7 Johnson said he struggled with his “extension” in Toronto because of elbow problems. It led to command issues, and getting balls up in the strike zone in hitter-friendly Rogers Centre proved costly.

Johnson went 2-8 with a 6.20 ERA and allowed 15 home runs in 16 starts as the Blue Jays were one of the more disappoint­ing teams in baseball. After undergoing arthroscop­ic surgery to remove bone chips in his right elbow Oct. 1, the Blue Jays decided not to give him a qualifying offer. Johnson then told his agent he wanted to play for San Diego or San Francisco, so he could be closer to his Las Vegas home. Moving to a pitcherfri­endly park wouldn’t hurt, either.

Knowing he’d likely have to accept a one-year deal, he took the Padres’ offer, taking a pay cut from the four-year, $39 million deal he signed with the Marlins.

Now he joins a franchise looking to rebound from consecutiv­e 76-86 seasons, with free agency looming again next off-season.

“I want to get to the playoffs. I want to be in that atmosphere, to be throwing in October,” said Johnson, who turned 30 last month.

Johnson, who has thrown off a mound five times since the surgery, threw 35 pitches in a bullpen session with catcher Yasmani Grandal on Friday without problems. Black said he’ll throw again on Sunday and that he’s on the same schedule as the rest of the healthy starters.

 ?? LEON HALIP/Getty Images file photo ?? Plagued by elbow problems, Josh Johnson had a terrible 2013 season with the Toronto Blue Jays. He’s hoping for a rebound after signing a one-year contract with San Diego.
LEON HALIP/Getty Images file photo Plagued by elbow problems, Josh Johnson had a terrible 2013 season with the Toronto Blue Jays. He’s hoping for a rebound after signing a one-year contract with San Diego.

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