USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Buzz follows Tebow:

- Dana Hunsinger Benbow

As ex-QB struggles in Class AAA, the attention still persists.

INDIANAPOL­IS – By the time the gates opened to Victory Field at 5:30 p.m. before a game last week, a line of nearly 100 people had formed. One guy had a Sports Illustrate­d magazine in his hand, Tim Tebow in a Florida Gators football jersey on the cover. Another was wearing a No. 15 Denver Broncos Tebow jersey.

There was a buzz rippling through the line as these people stood in the hot summer heat at the third-base gate entrance.

Nothing against the Indianapol­is Indians, but there isn’t always this kind of buzz on game night.

An hour before, a cluster of media people, at least a dozen, were down in the visiting team’s dugout along the first-base line, anxiously awaiting a Triple-A outfielder to emerge from the clubhouse.

Tebow, the former NFL quarterbac­kturned pro baseball player, was in Indy with his Syracuse Mets team to launch a fourgame series against the Indians.

As reporters walked off the field, having gotten what they wanted from Tebow, and toward the Indians dugout, a player stood up, took his cap off and yelled, “Hey, you want to interview Darnell Sweeney?”

Sweeney is the second baseman for the Indians. The players in the dugout laughed.

This sort of thing doesn’t just happen in Indy when Tebow comes to town. It happens everywhere the 31-year-old plays, at all the minor league fields. The exact same thing.

First, he has to be Tim Tebow, the former NFL quarterbac­k – and then he’s Tim Tebow, the Class AAA baseball player.

“It’s just part of it and, honestly, I don’t make too much of it,” he said. “I just come and get to talk to a few people a few minutes beforehand ... and it’s really not too big of a deal for me.”

After coming out of Florida, the first college sophomore to win the Heisman Trophy, Tebow was picked 25th in the 2010 NFL draft by Denver. Despite touting a record of 8-6 as a starting quarterbac­k and leading the team to a playoff win, he never started again in the NFL.

Tebow signed a minor league contract with the New York Mets three years ago and has been with the organizati­on ever since, recently moving up from its Binghamton Rumble Ponies Class AA affiliate.

For the four-game series with Syracuse last week, the Indians averaged 9,310 fans. Their season average is 8,186.

“We can’t quantify the uptick in attendance exactly, but (can say) that we’ve seen more momentum for our July weekday games than in years past,” Indians spokesman Cheyne Reiter said. Are you ready for the Major Leagues?

“I’ve got to get a lot more hits before I think about that,” Tebow said. “You get that kind of question somewhat regularly and, for me, you can’t let yourself think about it. You have to be now in the present and focus on it, got to be able to continue to follow the process and improve before I really worry about that.” Which is harder? The NFL or baseball?

“Who’s pitching and who’s the defense?” Tebow says, laughing. “Both are really tough sports. Baseball is a game of failure. It’s going to sound weird and that’s one reason I really want to do it. It’s hard. It’s not easy. I mean, you’re really, really good if you (have) success three out of 10 times. Something I always appreciate­d about this game was the challenge of it. There is constantly that battle and that pursuit and I really enjoy that.”

Just how hard is baseball? In 75 games this season, Tebow has a .163 batting average and has nearly three times as many strikeouts than hits (98 strikeouts to 39 hits).

On his recent engagement to Demi-Leigh Nel-Peters, a South African who was crowned Miss Universe in 2017.

“It’s awesome. It’s a new season of life, but it’s a great season of life,” he said. “Unfortunat­ely, we are super busy so we don’t get to see each other as much as you’d like, as much as I’d like (and) I think she would like, too, but it’s enjoyable. It’s really fun looking forward to something so special.”

 ??  ?? Syracuse Mets outfielder and former NFL quarterbac­k Tim Tebow talks baseball before his game against the Indianapol­is Indians in mid-July. JENNA WATSON
Syracuse Mets outfielder and former NFL quarterbac­k Tim Tebow talks baseball before his game against the Indianapol­is Indians in mid-July. JENNA WATSON

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