USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Snell makes pitching ‘violently personal’

- Gabe Lacques

The reigning AL Cy Young Award winner riffs on perception­s of him and his Rays team as well as the AL East race and the baseball landscape.

PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla. – After winning 21 games, blowing away the field in adjusted ERA and providing a backbone for a pitching staff that needed one as it charted a revolution­ary course, Blake Snell isn’t holding back.

Not on his potential, not on his earning power, not on his Rays’ chances to upset the AL East power structure, and not on an industry landscape that gets chillier for players every winter.

First, though, is the matter of getting over the hump from potential to achievemen­t, which Snell did in dominant fashion last year, a stunning rebuke to those doubting he’d fulfill his significant promise.

“I heard a lot of people saying I won’t or I can’t,” Snell told USA TODAY on a recent morning at Rays camp. “It kind of pissed me off. And I said, ‘I will. I don’t care what you say. Just watch.’

“I made it happen, and that’s all that matters to me.”

The words reveal the competitor within, and his ability to transform from fun-loving jester to the man they call “Snellzilla” every fifth day.

“Stuff, mentality, maturity. And motivation, character, mind-set,” Rays general manager Erik Neander says of his 26-year-old ace. “Highly competitiv­e individual who knows when to have fun and when to be really serious, and attack and get the job done.”

The measurable­s from 2018 jump off the page: a 1.89 ERA and 219 ERA-plus (Trevor Bauer was second at 189), 221 strikeouts in 1802⁄3 innings. That was enough to best a deep Cy Young field with a diverse set of cases to make.

It was other factors, however, that guided Snell through finishing school and into the pantheon of the elite.

“My mentality is really everything,” Snell says. “If I’m not pitching, I’m pretty laid-back, goofy. An hour until I pitch, until I’m done? It’s serious. It’s personal. I don’t like the way I felt when I got sent down (in 2017), the way I felt with my teammates. I just remember that and realize, ‘I’m not going to let that happen again.’

“So when I pitch, it’s violently personal. You’re just not going to beat me, is the way I have to look at it. Sometimes you lose, but it’s all about understand­ing how I’m going to get that guy out this time as well as next time.”

The Rays dealt away several veterans during spring training. By the trade deadline, Nate Eovaldi and Chris Archer were shipped to Boston and Pittsburgh, respective­ly, leaving Snell as their only starting pitcher.

While injuries forced the Rays into early-season “bullpen” games, they disrupted baseball history, perhaps significantly, on May 19, when they handed the ball to closer Sergio Romo to start a game in Anaheim, California.

The Opener was born. By season’s end, they’d tap fireballing reliever Ryne Stanek to start 29 games, with Romo and Diego Castillo combining for 16 more “openings.”

The Rays went 69-51 beginning with Romo’s opener and put together a startling 90-win season.

Both the methods and the outcome likely aren’t possible if Snell didn’t pitch into the seventh inning in 13 of his 31 starts, most of the time in dominant fashion.

“Even if we hit a little skid, we knew that when Zilla took the mound, we were in good shape,” Stanek says.

For more than a decade, the Rays have been cast as the oddball overachiev­ers led to prosperity by progressiv­e executives such as former general manager Andrew Friedman and manager Joe Maddon, to the current regime led by Neander, vice president of baseball operations Chaim Bloom and manager Kevin Cash.

“That’s what keeps us relevant to the media,” Snell says. “It’s always the tricky, quirky stuff we do that gets people interested in the Rays. It’s not, ‘This team’s good.’ I haven’t felt that, at least.

“I’ve only felt, ‘They’ve got an Opener! The shift!’ All this stuff they talk about with the Rays because we start it, but it’s not like, ‘Oh, the Rays are actually really good.’ They don’t talk about that.

“It makes me want to make our name as a team way better. People can say they know us now, but we won’t get the respect until we win the World Series. Go win a World Series, and they’ll talk about you.”

After paying starter Charlie Morton a franchise-record $15 million for each of the next two seasons and trading for versatile and hard-hitting Yandy Diaz, the Rays on paper could be better than their 2018 squad.

Those 90 wins put them 10 games behind the Yankees and 18 games behind the 108-win, World Series champion Red Sox. The path does not change this year.

“When you play those good teams, you’re the team that looks them in the eyes and says, ‘Let’s go. You have nowhere to go,’ ” he says. “And that’s kind of where our mentality needs to be — more personal. A ‘We’re here to embarrass you’ type thing, as opposed to, ‘Well, I hope we win.’ ”

The Rays’ opening-day payroll should still be somewhere in the $60 million range. They’ve become a favored talking point for Commission­er Rob Manfred, who recently disputed the notion that spending correlates strongly to on-field prosperity.

“(Manfred) has to boost up the league and say all the teams that aren’t spending money, they still can be good,” Snell says. “But we’re just a good team that kept trading our great players for a lot of prospects, and it timed up well. I think he’s just trying to promote that you don’t need to spend as much money, which is bull, especially with how many bats are out there.

“I think of free agency and it used to be the place to be, and now it’s not. I got upset when I saw (infielder) Josh Harrison sign (with Detroit) for one year and $2 million. What? Dude’s a beast. It was so saddening. But it’s like, why don’t you just make a team better? There’s a legit team of free agents. What? (Craig) Kimbrel, come here, please! I wouldn’t mind Adam Jones, a lot of people. A pretty good list.

“An expansion team, let’s do it, right now, from free agency.”

The Rays’ model has long been to approach young players extremely early and offer them contract extensions that buy out arbitratio­n and early free agent years; pitchers such as James Shields, Wade Davis, Matt Moore and Chris Archer opted for long-term security, while Cy Young winner David Price chose a year-to-year approach.

Price was eventually traded to the Tigers and he ultimately signed the richest free agent contract for a pitcher, $217 million with the Red Sox in 2016.

The market has shifted since then, and it’s unknown if such riches will be available to Snell.

“I don’t see the point in signing a deal,” Snell says. “I’d rather just try to max everything else out in arb, believe in myself, push myself. It allows me to really see what I got, and what I can do and make.

“I don’t think there’s anything more beautiful than betting on yourself and achieving it every time.”

 ?? JENNIFER BUCHANAN/USA TODAY SPORTS ??
JENNIFER BUCHANAN/USA TODAY SPORTS
 ?? KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Blake Snell and his Rays teammates, who won 90 games in 2018, are hoping for even better results in 2019.
KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS Blake Snell and his Rays teammates, who won 90 games in 2018, are hoping for even better results in 2019.

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