Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

WINNING BETTS

Mookie is looking for Dodgers to ‘get the job done’ again this season

- By Bill Plunkett bplunkett@scng.com @billplunke­ttocr on Twitter

GLENDALE, ARIZ. » In his first season with the Dodgers, Mookie Betts finished second in the National League MVP voting, won Gold Glove and Silver Slugger awards and earned his second World Series ring.

As the season was playing out, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Betts had somehow proven to be “considerab­ly better than expected” when he arrived from Boston.

“I just don’t know how many more superlativ­es you can add,” Roberts said last season.

Asked for his own assessment of his 2020, Betts adopted a much different tone.

“It was serviceabl­e. It got the job done,” he said Friday morning at Camelback Ranch. “That’s what we’re here for. This year, I’m not looking to be any better or any worse. Just come here to do my job. Help the team win, no matter what it takes.”

When told Betts had labeled his 2020 performanc­e as “serviceabl­e,” Roberts chuckled.

“Man, I’ll take serviceabl­e then if that’s if that’s what he classified it as,” Roberts said. “Mookie, like all great players, expect a lot from themselves.

“But I certainly would think it was more than serviceabl­e. But ultimately we won a championsh­ip, and that was the ultimate goal.”

If the Dodgers were pleasantly surprised by how good Betts was last year, it might be because they expected a five-tool player — and got a six-tool player. Betts’ leadership ability was apparent before the first full-squad workout last spring when he stood up in front of his new team and spoke about what he felt it would take to win a championsh­ip, setting a tone of focus and commitment.

This spring, Betts said he didn’t feel the need to reprise the moment.

“I think it’s just kind of carried over,” he said. “I don’t think it needs to be said. I think we kind of see it worked. It wasn’t just me though. It took everybody. That was the thing. Everybody kind of bought in to the culture, and I think that culture is here to stay.”

The fine system that Betts and Justin Turner put in place last spring is also here to stay. Betts joked that everyone is still “knocking the rust off” so enough money has already been collected from errors during the workouts that “we can go to a nice dinner.”

The season following Betts’ first World Series experience in 2018, the Boston Red Sox were under .500 in early May on their way to finishing third in their division and missing the playoffs. But Betts said he wouldn’t blame that — or the fact no team has repeated as World Series champions since 2000 — on a championsh­ip hangover.

“I think it’s all a kind of a mental thing. If you say there’s a hangover, a hangover is more bound to happen,” Betts said. “I think we’re here to work. We can’t really worry about that because that’s not here. I think we’ll take it one day at a time. I think we’re doing that. We’re doing everything with a purpose.

“You can’t really worry about all those other things. You can say there’s a hangover. You can say the pitching is going to be stretched (by the return to a 162-game regular season). You can say all those type of things. To me, those are all excuses. You fix your mind to go into battle and let the chips fall

where they may.”

A number of players — and Roberts as well — have talked about the fact that last year’s championsh­ip couldn’t be celebrated fully due to the coronaviru­s pandemic — no champagne showers, no championsh­ip parade through downtown. That, they have said, is a motivation to win again this year.

“I mean, if that’s what your motivation is then that’s what your motivation is,” Betts said. “That’s not mine. It’s just to hold up that trophy.”

 ?? STAFF FILE — 2020 ?? Dodgers right fielder Mookie Betts called his 2020 season ‘serviceabl­e’ after winning Gold Glove and Silver Slugger awards.
STAFF FILE — 2020 Dodgers right fielder Mookie Betts called his 2020 season ‘serviceabl­e’ after winning Gold Glove and Silver Slugger awards.

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