Los Angeles Times

Who’s on first? He’s a project

Dodgers’ Pederson is a work in progress at first base, and that’s OK, Roberts says.

- By Mike DiGiovanna

Joc Pederson made his third consecutiv­e start at first base Sunday for the Dodgers, and it was, shall we say … interestin­g.

The outfielder-turned in fielder looked shaky while catching two foul popups in the second inning of a 6-3 walk-off win over the Colorado Rockies, lunging hard to his right at the last second to glove Brendan Rodgers’ pop and falling to the ground as he caught Pat Valaika’s near the on-deck circle.

Then, in the seventh inning, Pederson made a diving stop to his right of Raimel Tapia’s grounder and, from a seated position, made a firm and accurate toss to the moving target that was pitcher Kenta Maeda covering the bag for the first out.

“He’s gonna be fine,” manager Dave Roberts said of Pederson, who made his debut at first base against San Francisco on Thursday night and started there again Monday at Arizona. “It’s not a finished product, but this is something we’re committed to, his teammates are understand­ing of, and we’ve all bought into. It’s not all gonna be good.”

Pederson’s growing pains at the new position also were evident in Saturday night’s 5-4 win over the Rockies.

He made a nice play to his right to field Charlie Blackmon’s grounder and throw to second base in the third inning, but he bobbled the relay throw on a potential double-play grounder later in the inning, which allowed the Rockies to score an unearned run, and had trouble getting the ball out of his glove on Hyun-Jin Ryu’s pick-off of Ian Desmond in the fifth.

“The more you run a player out there, the more comfortabl­e he gets,” Roberts said. “The more conversati­on you have about situations and bunt plays … I would expect Joc to be much more tired mentally than physically these last few days, but I trust his acumen, his eagerness to learn and his ability to play the position.”

The left-handed-hitting Pederson worked out periodical­ly at first base during the last three years, but began a crash-course at the position last week with an eye toward increasing his versatilit­y and helping the Dodgers put their most potent lineup on the field.

By having Pederson play first base against right-handed pitchers, the Dodgers can keep hot-hitting rookie Alex Verdugo in the outfield when center fielder A.J. Pollock, who has been sidelined since late April because of a right-elbow infection, comes off the injured list after the All-Star break.

Pederson has been doing extensive pregame work with coaches Dino Ebel and George Lombard on positionin­g and technique and taking ground balls at first.

“He’s got good hands, good footwork, and he reads spin well off the bat,” Ebel said. “He has good feel on double plays, holding the runner. The toughest thing is the ball is gonna get to him quicker. He’s got to be in a position to anticipate that and field the ball.”

Among the toughest plays for a new first baseman is making the split-second decision to range to his right for a grounder or to break for the bag and let the second baseman field it, a play that has become even more difficult with the infield shifts so many teams employ.

“We’ve been working hard going to his right, into the four-hole, where he has to spin and make that throw to the pitcher when he needs to,” Ebel said. “Or if the batter isn’t a fast runner, he’ll have time to get his momentum toward first base and make a nice flip.”

Pederson is among the team’s top weapons against right-handers. He has an .875 on-base-plus-slugging percentage and 20 homers, all against right-handers. Roberts is not worried about the stress of learning a new position taking a toll.

“With Joc, it’s like a new toy, and it will actually benefit him,” Roberts said. “Yeah, there’s a mental grind with learning a new position, but pitch-to-pitch engagement, I think, is a good thing for him.”

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