Calhoun Times

Cubs hoping Bellinger puts up big numbers

- By Jorge Castillo

The next chapter in Cody Bellinger’s profession­al baseball career began Saturday with a mistake as he walked to the plate for his first at-bat as a member of the Chicago Cubs.

“Number 35,” the public address announcer bellowed at Sloan Park, “Cody Bellinger!”

The problem: Bellinger isn’t No. 35 anymore. That was his number with the Dodgers. Those days are over. He’s No. 24 now. The blue is a little different. There’s a little more red. He’s playing for a team without World Series expectatio­ns for the first time in his career, but the pressure to recapture his All-Star form remains.

Bellinger’s time with the Dodgers abruptly ended before anyone could have expected in the not-so-distant past. He was non-tendered in November with one year of club control remaining. His drop-off over the previous three seasons was steep, but the move was still jarring. The wound evidently hasn’t healed.

For four days, Bellinger did not appear in the clubhouse when it was open for the media after being informed of an interview request from a Los Angeles reporter. On the third day, he took the long way off a backfield to avoid the reporter and a Los Angeles television crew.

He formally declined to speak through a Cubs spokespers­on on the fourth day, Saturday, after going 0 for two with a strikeout in his Cubs spring training debut. Bellinger did not make the trip to Camelback Ranch on Sunday for the game against the Dodgers.

“The truth of it is until he was non-tendered, I really did not really have a lot of conversati­ons with the Dodgers because I felt it was rather a matter of fact that he would continue with them because they had rights over him,” Scott Boras, Bellinger’s agent, said last week. “I had no idea that they would non-tender him.”

Boras had good reason. Bellinger, 27, batted .203 with a .648 on-base-plus-slugging percentage over the last three seasons, but he was named National League MVP the year before. He’s a former rookie of the year and a twotime All-Star. He has a Gold Glove and Silver Slugger in his trophy case. He became a fan favorite in Los Angeles over six seasons, helping them reach the postseason every year and win a World Series title in 2020.

But the Dodgers determined paying Bellinger $18 million, the salary projected

via arbitratio­n, was too much. They decided releasing the center fielder with the hopes of re-signing him for much cheaper was better than paying that price.

Boras said he met with Andrew Friedman, the Dodgers’ president of baseball operations, during the winter meetings the first week of December. Friedman explained not tendering Bellinger a contract was an “economic decision” and they were open to re-signing him at a lower price.

Boras said 11 teams contacted him regarding Bellinger the day he was let go. Bellinger eventually agreed on a one-year contract worth $17.5 million guaranteed with the Cubs during the winter meetings.

“We felt like there was a lot of upside there,” Cubs general manager Carter Hawkins said. “When you see someone that actually played at that level before, it’s a lot easier to project that he could get back to it than someone who never has.”

The Dodgers will enter the 2023 season with uncertaint­y in center field after losing out on free agent Kevin Kiemaier. Jason Heyward, Chris Taylor and Trayce Thompson are candidates to split time there.

“The marketplac­e was very different as to what the Dodgers thought Cody’s value was,” Boras said.

Bellinger’s production tumbled during the pandemicsh­ortened 2020 season after winning the MVP award. He then dislocated his shoulder during the National League Championsh­ip Series. The injury required surgery in November, which, by all accounts, sapped his strength in 2021.

Landing on the injured list three times — he fractured his fibula, dealt with hamstring tightness, and broke a rib — limited him to 95 games. He batted .165 with a .542 OPS, but the Dodgers still believed in his talent.

The numbers improved in 2022 but not by much. He hit .210 with a .654 OPS in 144 games. He was relegated to a platoon — not starting against left-handed pitchers — by September. The demotion took another step with the season on the line in Game 4 of the National League Division Series when he was benched against San Diego Padres right-hander Joe Musgrove.

Cubs officials said Bellinger will play every day in center field. Their focus is on two areas: his health, which they believe will produce more consistent mechanics.

“I think all of those things are intertwine­d,” Hawkins said. “It’s always something at the lower end of the chain that affects something on the upper end of the chain. The body’s a system. The swing is a system. And you can’t do one thing without affecting the other.”

 ?? Matt Kartozian ?? Chicago Cubs center fielder Cody Bellinger (24) doubles in the first inning against the Seattle Mariners during a Spring Training game at Sloan Park.
Matt Kartozian Chicago Cubs center fielder Cody Bellinger (24) doubles in the first inning against the Seattle Mariners during a Spring Training game at Sloan Park.

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