USA TODAY US Edition

Bregman: WBC ‘complete honor’

Astro light on playing time, big on pride

- FOLLOW MLB COLUMNIST BOB NIGHTENGAL­E @BNightenga­le for commentary and breaking news in baseball. Bob Nightengal­e bnighten@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

Alex Bregman, by all SAN DIEGO rights, should be in West Palm Beach, Fla., these days, trying to establish himself as a big-leaguer with the Houston Astros.

He has been in the major leagues for only 70 days, playing 50 games after making his debut with the Astros last summer.

No starting job has been promised to him. In fact, all the players competing for his job are in the Astros camp, showing up every morning by 8, playing in Houston’s exhibition games and trying to impress management.

Yet 2,595 miles away you will find Bregman, 22, wearing the uniform of Team USA in the World Baseball Classic.

He has an impressive amateur résumé, but the guys he stays with are perennial All-Stars and MVPs. His postseason experience consists of three games with the Class A Lancaster (Calif.) JetHawks, while the guy who starts at shortstop has three World Series rings.

Still, despite risking his starting job and missing out on valuable experience and exposure playing every day in spring training, Bregman is right where he wants to be.

He’s representi­ng his country and, for the fifth time in his young life, playing for the USA in an internatio­nal tournament.

Knock the WBC all you want, ignore it if you must, but if you dare criticize it, you’re going to have to go through Bregman, who represents the event’s glorious future. He’s the all-American kid who grew up in Albuquerqu­e, attended LSU, was drafted with the second pick in the country, and now is a key ingredient to the Astros’ World Series aspiration­s.

He might be the youngest guy on Team USA, but he has an old school soul, ridiculing Venezuela second baseman Rougned Odor on Twitter for his bat flip and celebratin­g what he thought was a home run, only for it to bounce off the fence, leaving him with a long single.

“This (look) at me stuff is brutal,” Bregman tweeted. “Act like you’ve done it before. #SMH.”

Bregman, knowing Odor is a rival on the Texas Rangers and also happens to be a Venezuela teammate of Astros second baseman Jose Altuve, quickly deleted it.

He plans to stick to talking about his own team the rest of the tournament, although he’d love to have bragging rights in the Astros clubhouse with his teammates playing for Venezuela and Puerto Rico in this pool.

“This is something I dreamed about as a young kid, watching the Olympics, always wanting to play for the United States of America,” Bregman tells USA TODAY Sports. “This is a complete honor. It’s one of the best achievemen­ts I’ve had in my life, and hopefully I can continue that in the future.

“It’s tough not playing much, but being surrounded by so many great big-leaguers, picking everyone’s brain and trying to soak it in, I’m right where I want to be.”

Bregman, USA TODAY Sports’ minor league player of the year in 2016, is the guy who wants to be here, volunteeri­ng to Major League Baseball officials before they called him. He had one plate appearance in the tournament before his scheduled start Wednesday night against Venezuela. Players have snubbed the invitation and others have dropped out, but as long as they want him, Bregman plans to be here.

“It’s great for Major League Baseball,” said Joe Torre, MLB chief baseball officer, “because he’s going to go back to his team and say what a real positive experience it was. I think going forward, it bodes well for the tournament, because word of mouth is the best thing.”

The only glitch in Bregman’s WBC excursion is playing time.

The presence of Nolan Arenado, Brandon Crawford and Ian Kinsler left Bregman with one atbat and a half-inning in the field entering Wednesday, which has left the Astros concerned.

“The downside of being on a star-studded team is very minimal playing time,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch told reporters at their spring training camp. “There’s not much he can do about it. Going five or six days with one at-bat is a tough part about being on that team as a reserve.”

Certainly, USA manager Jim Leyland understand­s the frustratio­n, and he decided Tuesday to do something about it. He told Bregman that he would start Wednesday at shortstop against Venezuela, even if it meant benching his hottest hitter, with Crawford batting .455 with a .500 on-base percentage.

“You’ve got to do what’s right,” Leyland told USA TODAY Sports. “He deserves this. You hate to sit Crawford, but (Bregman) wants to be here. He needs to get ready for the season. He deserves to play.”

If it were simply about playing time in the WBC, Bregman would have played for Team Israel. They called him first, badly wanting him as their lone major league player on a 40-man roster. Bregman was appreciati­ve of the offer, but despite it being a case of playing every day or sitting, he couldn’t turn his back on Team USA.

“I feel like I represente­d the United States in the past,” Bregman says, “and this is where I was born. I’m proud to be an American. I’m proud to be from this great country. If I got the opportunit­y to play for this team, I wouldn’t turn it down.”

Even if Team USA had not called him, Bregman says, he would have gone to the Astros spring training camp and not with Team Israel, which was eliminated Wednesday by Japan. Nothing personal, he says, but Asia was too far to travel to play for Israel and still be ready for the Astros season.

So he’s taking the advice of Astros teammate and Puerto Rico designated hitter Carlos Beltran to heart and soaking in as much as he can here.

“What an awesome learning experience,” Bregman says. “I’m surrounded by so many great bigleaguer­s. I get to pick the brains of guys like Crawford and Arenado and what helps them defensivel­y in the infield, and trying to apply some of that to my game and see if I can take my defense to the next level.

“I know it will only help me once our season starts.”

If Bregman is worried about his starting job, concerned that his lack of playing time will be detrimenta­l to making the opening-day roster, Astros GM Jeff Luhnow wants to relay a message.

“This is his first opportunit­y to make the opening-day roster, so it’s important he gets ready,” Luhnow says.

“But I’ll tell you what, I went to the (USA-Dominican Republic) game, and that was as intense an atmosphere I’ve ever seen. That was a great experience for him. When he gets back from the WBC, he’ll make up for it.

“When opening day comes, yes, he’s going to be on our team. Come on, he’s just too good.”

 ?? ORLANDO JORGE RAMIREZ, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Alex Bregman had one at-bat in the World Baseball Classic before Wednesday’s scheduled start for Team USA.
ORLANDO JORGE RAMIREZ, USA TODAY SPORTS Alex Bregman had one at-bat in the World Baseball Classic before Wednesday’s scheduled start for Team USA.
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