Los Angeles Times

Peralta tries to keep train rolling despite slow start with Dodgers

- BY JACK HARRIS

PHOENIX — As one of the more subtle side effects of their talent exodus over the winter, the Dodgers entered this season needing a new celebratio­n for every time they got a hit.

With Trea Turner having departed in free agency, the helmet-tap ritual the club’s former shortstop inspired last season was voided. And leading up to opening day, players kicked around ideas in a team text message group chat about how to replace it.

“We talked about it before the season started,” outfielder David Peralta said. “Like, hey, what’s gonna be our sign for when we get hits?”

Peralta, one of several veterans the club signed this winter as part of its roster makeover, offered an idea.

“I said, ‘If you want to get on the freight train, get on board,’ ” Peralta recalled with a laugh, referring to the nickname — and accompanyi­ng choo-choo hand signal — he’s had since the start of his major league career. “And everyone was like, ‘We’re gonna do the freight train. Let’s do the choochoo.’ ”

Just like that, a new onbase routine was born — providing a glimpse into the kind of impact the 35-yearold Peralta is making during his first season in Los Angeles.

“I just love the way he plays every game like it’s his last,” manager Dave Roberts said. “There’s a fire, there’s an energy he brings. He’s an intelligen­t baseball player. … He’s a very unselfish ballplayer. So what I kind of hoped I’d see from him is exactly what he’s done.”

That’s been true despite a slow start at the plate from the former Arizona Diamondbac­ks star, who is just four for 23 after signing a one-year, $6.5-million deal this offseason to serve as a platoon option in left field.

In the series finale of his homecoming at Chase Field this weekend — in which the 10th-year veteran was welcomed back with his old instadium train horn sound, but also booed semi-playfully by the home crowd — Peralta delivered in his first at-bat, lining an RBI double into the left-field corner to give the Dodgers an early lead.

After that, though, he came up empty in his next four trips to the plate, having yet to end a slump that stretches back to the end of last year.

“The process has been great,” Roberts said earlier in the weekend. “There’s been a couple of at-bats where he’s chased late. But I feel good every time he’s in the batter’s box.”

In the meantime, Peralta has settled in with the club in other ways — epitomized every time someone gets on base, turns toward the dugout and pulls down on an imaginary train horn with a closed fist.

“He’s been a big addition to this team,” said outfielder Trayce Thompson, who played with Peralta for one season in Arizona.

“Not just who he is as a player — everyone knows what he brings to the game as a player and a teammate — but his energy and passion for the game is something that I think we’re all really excited to see and be around every day.”

Indeed, those have been defining characteri­stics for Peralta since the start of his career, when the converted pitcher and former independen­t league prospect made an impression with everything from his Gold Glove defense to a hardchargi­ng style on the base paths.

“He runs the bases with his hair on fire, like a train that’s going off the track,” said Diamondbac­ks television broadcaste­r Steve Berthiaume, who coined Peralta’s freight-train nickname during his rookie season in 2014.

“Thankfully, David liked it and made up some Tshirts and put it on the bottom of his bat,” Berthiaume added. “It just kind of became a thing.”

A decade later, the nickname — and the enthusiast­ic attitude it represents — remains central to Peralta’s reputation, drawing the Dodgers to him this offseason as they looked for another veteran bat.

“For a team that’s as establishe­d, that has accomplish­ed so much as this organizati­on, that energy is infectious,” Thompson said. “It’s something I think is super necessary.”

When coupled with the additions of other veterans such as Jason Heyward and Miguel Rojas, plus the emergence of rookies Miguel Vargas and James Outman, Thompson said it’s given this year’s team a different dynamic.

“It’s been a really cool mix,” he said. “Kind of a breath of fresh air.”

And to Peralta, it’s the type of influence he always has strived to bring — even as he works through an early slump with a Dodgers team he used to count as a division rival.

“I’ve been facing these guys for a long time,” Peralta said. “And yet, when I stepped in the clubhouse, it felt like we’ve been together for a long time.

“It wasn’t like, ‘Oh, I don’t know anyone.’ No, everyone welcomed me really well. Like, ‘Finally, you’re on this side.’

“So it didn’t take too long to click.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? DAVID PERALTA said “it didn’t take too long to click” with his new teammates after joining the team.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times DAVID PERALTA said “it didn’t take too long to click” with his new teammates after joining the team.

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