Los Angeles Times

McKinstry back on Dodgers’ radar

- By Jorge Castillo

SURPRISE, Ariz. — For the final stretch of their 2019 season, the triple-A Oklahoma City Dodgers employed the most productive duo of middle infielders in the Pacific Coast League.

The second baseman batted .392 with 13 home runs in 49 games. His name was Gavin Lux and he was cementing his status as one of baseball’s premier prospects before getting called up to the majors in September.

The shortstop, promoted from double A more than a month after Lux, batted .382 with seven home runs in 26 triple-A games. His name was Zach McKinstry and he wasn’t a prospect. He was, until last season, an afterthoug­ht pushed to the side for peers with flashier pedigrees and tools.

“They’re very similar,” said infielder Edwin Ríos, who played with both players last season. “One’s a prospect and the other isn’t.”

While Lux’s razing of the upper minors last season vaulted his standing to consensus top-five prospect across the sport, the 24year-old McKinstry’s performanc­e produced its own leap.

He morphed from roster filler drafted in the 33rd round in 2016 to a player the Dodgers believe will debut in the major leagues in 2020 and become a regular contributo­r in the future.

The Dodgers placed him on their 40-man roster during the offseason and he’s capitalize­d on opportunit­ies this spring. McKinstry is the super-utility type the Dodgers value in the same bucket as Chris Taylor and Kiké Hernández. He’s played second base, third base, shortstop, left field and right field in the Cactus League after reporting to spring training with six gloves broken in. On Sunday, he went one for two as the Dodgers’ designated hitter against the Texas Rangers to push his batting average to .375 with two home runs, a triple and a double.

“He’s really performed himself into being a real guy as far as being on the roster and being one of the prospects,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “He can play anywhere on the diamond, he’s an intelligen­t player. He conducts really good at-bats. He’s a guy that I wouldn’t be surprised if we saw him some time this year.”

McKinstry was never a prospect. He was a prolific high school player in Fort Wayne, Ind., where he nearly broke the state record for triples in a season, but wound up attending Central Michigan where realistic major league aspiration­s are as dead as the winters. He was the starting shortstop from the moment he stepped on campus and appeared in 118 games across two seasons, but never hit a home run.

He was small and scrawny. His tools didn’t pop eyes. He was, as he described it, a slap hitter, and slap hitters from the Midwest don’t excite scouts. He slipped to the 33rd round as a draft-eligible sophomore in 2016 and wavered on signing with the Dodgers. He played in one game in the Cape Cod League that summer before a friend’s mother died and he returned home. He then decided to sign for $100,000 two days before the deadline.

His status within the organizati­on became apparent immediatel­y; when he was assigned to Class-A Great Lakes, he played third base to get in the lineup because the Dodgers had Omar Estevez and Brendon Davis, two highly regarded prospects, in the middle infield.

“I got there and I was like, ‘If I want to play, I got to play third,’ ” McKinstry said. “So it’s about the at-bats and being in the game.”

From there, McKinstry bounced around the infield, carving playing time wherever he could find some, and added outfielder to his resume in 2018. He reached double A that season, but struggled, batting .193 with a .543 on-base-plus-slugging percentage in 25 games for Tulsa. The team won the Texas League title, but McKinstry was relegated to the bench in the playoffs. His playing time was limited to one pinch-hit appearance in eight games. He flied out in Game 2 of the championsh­ip series. That was it.

“I didn’t play,” McKinstry said, “because I sucked.”

So McKinstry hit the road when the season ended. Home was north, in Indiana, but he traveled 1,000 miles west from Tulsa with a friend until they reached Camelback Ranch. Arizona would be his home for the offseason. His winter in the desert was to ensure he wouldn’t suck like that again.

He spent his days putting on muscle and working with members of the Dodgers’ hitting staff. The goal was to remain consistent as the pitching improved while increasing his power to become a gap-to-gap hitter with enough pop for the occasional home run. The results were promising from the start of the 2018 season with Tulsa, where he batted .279 with 12 home runs in 95 games before reaching triple A. McKinstry hit 19 homers in 2019 across the highest two minor league levels after hitting only 11 homers in his first three minor league seasons.

“Really, last year, when we played in Tulsa, where we started the year together, I was like, ’Damn he can play. He’s a really good player,’ ” recalled Lux.

After tearing up the PCL together last season, the two might share the middle infield at Dodger Stadium in 2020, a far-fetched possibilit­y just a year ago.

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