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by J.R.
Lonnie Chisenhall seizes third-base job with hot spring: Terry Pluto
By Terry Pluto, The Plain Dealer
on March 25, 2013 at 7:52 PM, updated March 25, 2013 at 7:58 PM Print
GOODYEAR, Ariz. -- Lonnie Chisenhall said the phone call mattered.
It happened not long after Terry Francona was hired as the new Tribe manager.
" 'Tito' said I was going to be his third baseman, and he expected me to hit the ground running," Chisenhall said. "It's so much different from last spring."
A year ago, the Indians weren't sure Chisenhall was ready to take over at third base. They had Jack Hannahan and wanted to have a strong glove there.
But if Chisenhall hit well in Arizona, he could win the job.
"I was terrible," he said. "I didn't hit a thing. I had some of the worst at-bats of my life. I felt a lot of pressure on almost every pitch and every swing."
His voice trailed off.
Chisenhall batted .205 last spring (8-of-39), with one double and no walks.
This spring, he is hitting .404 (1.217 OPS), with four homers, 12 RBI and seven walks in 47 at-bats.
"He has a really quick bat," Francona said. "He can flat-out hit a fastball. You like to see that. And the exciting part is that he has room to grow."
In 89 major-league games, Chisenhall has 16 errors -- a high rate for a third baseman.
This spring, he has made only one.
"He's a major-league average third baseman with a very accurate arm," Francona said. "And he'll get better."
While it seems as if Chisenhall (the Tribe's first-round pick in 2008) has been a prospect ever since the days of Al Rosen, he will play the entire season at age 24.
Players are aware that the front office comes into spring training with plans for certain players. They may be written in pencil -- as was the decision to open 2012 with Hannahan at third. But they still are plans.
Sometimes, a team is still learning about a player. Certain athletes perform better when they know the job has to be earned -- that someone else can take their place.
Their biggest enemy is complacency.
For others, they need security.
The Indians do have super-utility man Mike Aviles, who has played 61 games at third in his career. And Mark Reynolds came up as a third baseman, although his defense is iffy and he's slated for designated hitter and first base.
Third belongs to Chisenhall, especially given how he has performed this spring.
When sent to Class AAA Columbus to open 2012, Chisenhall hit .314 (.858 OPS), with four homers in 30 games.
He was promoted to the Tribe and batted .268 (.741 OPS), with five homers in 142 at-bats. But he was on the disabled list for two months with a broken arm after being hit by a pitch.
"I was 22 when I had my first big-league [spring] camp," he said. "This is the third time that I've had a chance to make a team out of spring training, and I know I'm ready. There are times when you stop being a prospect and you need to produce."
The lean 6-2, 190-pound Chisenhall has one of the sweetest, smoothest left-handed swings on the team.
In 354 big-league at-bats (.260 batting average) in two seasons, he has walked only 16 times.
"He doesn't swing and miss that much," Francona said. "So we want him to look for a pitch in the middle of the plate and really square up and hit it. We're not worried about him drawing more walks, we just want him to get the right pitches to hit."
Which is exactly what he has been doing this spring.