Braves' catchers feel pressure of Lopez's return
Sammans, Pena stay positive during battle for roster spot


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 02/23/08

Lake Buena Vista, Fla. — The Braves signed catcher Javy Lopez on Dec. 20, which probably didn't brighten Christmas for young catchers Clint Sammons and Brayan Pena. Their chances at the backup catcher job took a blow.

To their credit, both have shown a positive attitude this spring.

Vino Wong/Staff Photographer
Catcher Clint Sammons (left, with starting catcher Brian McCann) must wait to see what his role with the team will be.\uFEFF
 
Your Turn
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
[an error occurred while processing this directive]

"I don't think it's discouraging," said Sammons, the former University of Georgia standout from Decatur. "You've just got to bide your time and hope you get a fair shot. I'm coming to camp and building on what I did last year."

Sammons, 24, earned his first major-league call-up after hitting .249 with nine homers between stops at Class A Myrtle Beach and Class AA Mississippi. He's a "catch-and-throw" guy, a standout defensive catcher who hits just enough.

That's the typical job description for a backup catcher. But Lopez, a former Braves All-Star slugger, presents a compelling alternative for team officials.

At 37, Lopez isn't the hitter he was years ago. But he might be a better defensive catcher after he focused on that in winter workouts with Braves bench coach Chino Cadahia.

Lopez could also give the Braves a legitimate power threat as a pinch-hitter, unlike the other candidates. As first-base coach Glenn Hubbard said while watching him take batting practice Friday, "That's a three-run homer waiting to happen."

The Braves usually employed backup catchers from the catch-and-throw mold in the past, and didn't use them much as pinch-hitters. But if they go with Lopez as their backup, they could use him to pinch-hit when he's not behind the plate, with outfielder Matt Diaz available as an emergency catcher if starter Brian McCann got hurt. Diaz caught in Kansas City's instructional league three years ago.

The Braves will wait to decide on the backup job after seeing Lopez in spring games. Going deep against coaches in batting practice is one thing. Doing it against major-league pitchers is another.

"It's basically going to come down to what they want to do," Sammons said. "If it's a defensive position, I think I've got a good shot. That's what I do."

Escobar or K.J. likely to lead off

Manager Bobby Cox isn't certain who will hit first and second in front of Chipper Jones and Mark Teixeira, but it sounds as if he's leaning toward Yunel Escobar and Kelly Johnson.

"Either way you go with the first two guys, it doesn't matter, with Kelly and Escobar," Cox said.

Each excelled in the leadoff role last season. Escobar hit .351 with a .400 on-base percentage in 151 at-bats in the leadoff spot, and Johnson hit .268 with a .372 OBP in 306 at-bats.

Cox said either could bat second and hit behind runners, something shortstop Edgar Renteria did well in the 2-hole last season.

"Escobar can hit behind the runner as well as anybody I've ever seen," said Cox, known to use hyperbole on occasion when describing his players. "And Kelly [hits] left-handed, so it's easy for him."

Mark Kotsay could also get consideration for the No. 2 spot, which is what Jones said he prefers if Kotsay's healthy, saying that Kotsay is a better contact hitter than Johnson.

Johnson said, "I figured that Kotsay would have one of those two spots [atop the order]. It's interesting, and it'll probably be subject to change."



Atlanta Braves/MLB videos





AJC Breaking News Updates

Kudzu Services » Find the right people for the job