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Inside Baseball Posted: Tuesday August 20, 2002 5:29 PMHaving gotten a grip, sometimes spacey Junior Spivey is the Diamondbacks' catalyst By Stephen Cannella
"He's worked very hard to learn the strike zone and become more disciplined," manager Bob Brenly says. "What's surprising is that he's learned in such a short time." Spivey got his first taste of the majors in June 2001 when he was called up from Triple A Tucson. He hit .333 in his first 16 games, but pitchers soon realized that he had trouble hitting breaking pitches. By mid-September his average was down around .250, and Brenly left him off the Diamondbacks' postseason roster. "I thought about that every day this winter," Spivey says. "We won the World Series, but I was an outsider." Instead of heading home to Oklahoma City, Spivey spent most of the off-season in Phoenix working with Murphy. They concentrated on shortening Spivey's stride at the plate and getting him to use his hands more in his stroke; holding his hands back as long as possible keeps Spivey from committing too early on breaking pitches. The work paid off. In addition to his high average, Spivey, who now bats third, had 12 home runs through Sunday and the highest on-base percentage (.405) among the regulars on the team. However, he's shaky in the field -- his 14 errors were tied for the most among NL second basemen -- and has a tendency to space out. Concedes Spivey, "Forgetting [the number of] outs has been a problem." Still, says Brenly, "Every day we see signs of this guy maturing." Case in point: Against the Cubs last Saturday, Spivey kept a ninth-inning, game-winning rally alive by poking righthander Kyle Farnsworth's nasty, two-strike splitter on the outside corner into centerfield for a single. Says Brenly, "A year ago he probably would have tried to jack that ball into the seats." Less than a half hour after the game had ended, Spivey was studying video of that at bat on a laptop in the clubhouse. "I couldn't have written a better script for myself," he says. "Getting a chance to play every day on a world championship club, I'm the happiest guy in baseball." Issue date: August 26, 2002
For more Inside Baseball see this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, August 21. Click here to subscribe to SI.
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