New York Post

New body paying off for Stanton

- By GREG JOYCE

MINNEAPOLI­S — For all that was made over Giancarlo Stanton remaking his body during the offseason, it would not have mattered much in the end if it did not lead to better production and health.

The two have gone hand-inhand for Stanton since he became a Yankee, and while the season is just over one-quarter done, the early returns have been encouragin­g.

After getting lighter in the offseason in hopes of being “a baseball player again,” Stanton drilled his ninth home run of the season in Tuesday’s 5-1 win over the Twins. He has still been lighting up Statcast regularly with eyepopping exit velocities, but he was doing that on occasion even when he was hindered by lowerbody injuries in recent years.

This version of Stanton has noticeably moved around better and, most importantl­y, stayed healthy to date.

“Just being able to stay in my legs, stay moving around better and just contributi­ng,” Stanton said. “[The season] has been solid so far. It could always be better. But if I can contribute in some way each night, that’s what’s important.”

By this time in four of the last five seasons, Stanton was already on the injured list with a pulled muscle — a strained biceps after three games in 2019, a strained hamstring after 14 games in 2020, a strained quad after 33 games in 2021 and a strained hamstring after 13 games in 2023. In 2022, he made it through 40 games before landing on the injured list with right ankle inflammati­on.

Wednesday marked Stanton’s 38th game of the season, and so far, his body has held up following an offseason in which GM Brian Cashman bluntly said the slugger was “going to wind up getting hurt again more likely than not because it seems to be part of his game” (part of a longer answer about how Stanton could still produce when healthy).

A few of those early-season IL stints in past years derailed what had been strong starts for Stanton. In 2020, he was batting .293 with a 1.038 OPS before getting hurt. In 2021, he was batting .282 with a .882 OPS and nine home runs before going on the IL. And in 2022, he was batting .285 with a .863 OPS and 11 home runs when he landed on the IL.

This season, even without going on one of his patented hot streaks yet, Stanton went into Wednesday batting .236 with nine home runs and a 113 OPS-plus. He was even better with runners in scoring position, batting .323 with a 1.045 OPS. He then went 2-for-4 with a an RBI in the 4-0 win over the Twins.

“He’s been good. He’s been consistent,” manager Aaron Boone said. “He’s given us that presence in the middle of the order, whether it’s in that four or five hole, depending on who we’re facing. He’s had that presence.

“We go back to early when he had that stretch of 20 at-bats where he struggled a little bit, but even then, despite that slow start, I felt like he’s consistent­ly having at-bats where he’s in the fight every night. When he does that, he’s going to run into balls just because he’s so strong.”

 ?? AP ?? NOT BREAKING DOWN: Giancarlo Stanton, breaking his bat on an RBI single Wednesday, has avoided the IL this season.
AP NOT BREAKING DOWN: Giancarlo Stanton, breaking his bat on an RBI single Wednesday, has avoided the IL this season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States