Los Angeles Times

Flameout as an Angel, reborn as Dodger

Kazmir remodeled his pitching style after hitting a career nadir in Anaheim in 2011.

- By Dylan Hernandez dylan.hernandez@latimes.com Twitter: @dylanohern­andez Times staff writer Bill Shaikin contribute­d to this report.

The last time Scott Kazmir called this part of the country home, his career was on the verge of bottoming out.

Kazmir signed a threeyear contract with the Dodgers last week, but 41⁄2 years ago he was pitching for the Angels. His velocity was down and he couldn’t get anyone out. With $14.5 million remaining on his contract, the left-hander was released midway though the 2011 season.

“It was definitely a low point, me getting released by the Angels,” Kazmir said.

Speaking during an introducto­ry conference call Tuesday, the 32-year-old left-hander reflected on how, after nearly pitching his way out of baseball, he came back to secure a $48-million deal with the Dodgers.

“It was a long process,” Kazmir said.

He made stops in the independen­t Atlantic League, as well as the Puerto Rican winter league.

“Kind of wanting to take a step back and start from scratch, being able to go back to fundamenta­ls and really teach myself great habits and get away from the bad habits I created,” he said. “It was going back to the drawing board. I did a lot of drills I did back when I was a kid.”

Kazmir was 20 when he broke into the major leagues with Tampa Bay. He was a two-time All-Star at 24. But no matter how steep his decline, he said he never considered retirement.

“I always had the motivation, just because I knew it was still in there,” he said.

By the time he returned to the majors in 2013 with the Cleveland Indians, he was a new pitcher. Once armed with a fearsome fastball-slider combinatio­n, he used a varied arsenal of pitches that included a changeup.

“I feel like I’ve been getting better ever since,” he said.

He was a 2014 All-Star with the Oakland Athletics.

He had a record of 7-10 but a solid 3.10 earned-run average last year, which he split between the Athletics and Houston Astros.

“Back in the day, it was just get it and throw it,” he said. “I don’t know how I did it. I just did it. Now, being able to know my body a lot more and being a lot more knowledgea­ble about the game, it’s a huge advantage.”

Kazmir said about a dozen teams checked in with him this winter when he was a free agent.

He settled on the Dodgers, who included a contract provision that would allow him to return to the freeagent market next season.

“From a business perspectiv­e, it’s always good to have options,” he said. “That being said, I would be honored to finish my career with the Dodgers. I really would.” Maeda deal f inalized

The Dodgers have finalized their contract with Japanese right-hander Kenta Maeda and are expected to announce the deal this week.

The contract, believed to be for eight years, enables Maeda to earn more than $100 million but guarantees him as little as $24 million, according to a person familiar with the deal but not authorized to discuss it publicly. The Dodgers also must pay $20 million to his Japanese club, the Hiroshima Carp.

Maeda, 27, won Japan’s equivalent of the Cy Young award last year, going 15-8 with a 2.09 earned-run average for Hiroshima. He pitched 206 innings. Front office addition

Former Toronto general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s will join the Dodgers front office, according to multiple reports.

Anthopoulo­s, 38, stepped down from his position with the Blue Jays in October rather than remain with the club in a reduced role under new President Mark Shapiro.

Anthopoulo­s was credited with making moves — including trades for Josh Donaldson, David Price and Troy Tulowitzki — that helped the Blue Jays reach the playoffs last year for the first time since 1993.

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