The Commercial Appeal

At 42, Giambi now an elder statesman for Indians

- McClatchy News

CLEVELAND — A year ago, Jason Giambi was so close to his postplayin­g days that he interviewe­d for the Colorado Rockies manager’s job — and almost got it.

Now, Giambi is an important member of a Cleveland Indians team that will host Wednesday night’s AL wild-card game against the Tampa Bay Rays. Maybe not so much on the field — he appeared in only 71 games and batted .183 — but in the locker room.

Manager Terry Francona, in a quiet moment in his office following the Indians’ champagnes­oaked celebratio­n of their wild-card berth on Sunday in Minneapoli­s, was asked what the 42-year-old has meant to his team.

“You don’t have enough tape in that thing,” he said. “He’s meant everything. In the batter’s box he helped us. Out of the batter’s box he helped us. We leaned on him. Everybody, myself included, more than is probably fair. And he responded. In the clubhouse — just his presence. Without him, we’re not here. And that’s not an exaggerati­on.”

Yes, this is Jason Giambi we’re talking about. The same formerly free-living slugger who is best known for long home runs, allegation­s of long-term steroid use and — once while with the Yankees — wearing a gold thong under his uniform for good luck.

That Giambi has become an elder statesman is something that didn’t seem likely during his younger days. But here he is, providing value to the Indians for more than just his nine home runs and 31 RBIs.

“I just tried the whole year to mentor and keep the team together and do the little things,” Giambi said. “Help the young kids or keep them from getting down on themselves. Kind of crack the whip when I needed to crack the whip. I saw the potential in this team early on that this team could be something special because we really have that philosophy that there really isn’t one player more important than another.”

In one season, the Indians went from 68 wins to 92. Along with hiring Francona, Cleveland last offseason signed former Yankee Nick Swisher and almost-Met Michael Bourn to expensive free-agent contracts.

“It’s really a gift this year, everything that went on,” Giambi said.

“This ballclub coming together and where they were the last couple years. Bringing all these new faces in and watching these young kids grow. It’s something special.”

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Lance Lynn was named the starter for the team in Game 2 of their NLDS series against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
JEFF ROBERSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Lance Lynn was named the starter for the team in Game 2 of their NLDS series against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

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