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Mookie Betts might be the smallest player ever to compete in the Home Run Derby.

He also might be the most apathetic.

Betts, the Los Angeles Dodgers star who heads into Monday’s eight-player, bracket-style tournament in Seattle as the No. 3 seed, doesn’t want to do the Derby. He isn’t shy about saying so, either. He’s taking part only because his wife, Brianna, thought it would look good on a résumé that includes an MVP Award, two World Series titles, five Silver Sluggers, six Gold Gloves and seven All-Star Game appearances.

“She was like, ‘You’ve done everything you’ve wanted in baseball,'” Betts recalled. “‘The only thing you’ve never done is the Derby.'”

The only problem: Betts says he doesn’t stand a chance.

“Let’s be real,” he said, “I’m not a power guy. Do I have some home runs? Sure.”

Mookie, he is told on the afternoon of Independence Day, you lead the Dodgers in home runs. You already have 23 [it’s actually 26 now]. You might have your fourth 30-homer season before the start of August.

“Yeah,” he said, “but they all go 382 feet.”

Baseball-Reference.com lists Betts at 5-foot-9 and 180 pounds. Based on the site’s unofficial measurements, nobody has ever competed in the Derby at 5-9 or shorter and 180 pounds or lighter. A couple of notable 5-9 players participated — Miguel Tejada, who won it in 2004, and Ivan Rodriguez, who reached the finals in 2005 — but they were heavier, stronger, able to generate power more efficiently and gifted with the freedom of mishitting balls that still carried.

Betts doesn’t have that luxury. His average home run distance this season, 397 feet, ranks 168th among 264 players. Five of his seven Derby competitors — Julio Rodriguez, Pete Alonso, Adley Rutschman, Luis Robert Jr. and Vladimir Guerrero Jr., the latter of whom he’ll match up with in Round 1 — are at least five inches taller and 40 pounds heavier. Triggering bonus time by hitting two home runs at least 440 feet seems almost impossible, which means Betts will probably have to beat significantly larger men in a power competition with 30 fewer seconds at his disposal.

Betts — famous among teammates for harsh self-criticism, a trait some believe helped propel him to greatness — has frequently and openly lamented the circumstances in recent days. Fellow Dodger J.D. Martinez quickly grew tired of hearing it.

“You’ve got what they don’t have,” Martinez told him early last week.

“What?” Betts responded with a side-eye.

“Bat-to-ball.”

Martinez, who helped bring out some of Betts’ power when the two first teamed up in Boston, thinks the others will inevitably be hurt by attempts to pulverize pitches. He wants Betts to focus solely on catching baseballs with his barrel out front and barely lofting them over T-Mobile Park’s left-field fence, which sits 331 feet down the line but can stretch to 378 feet in the gap.

“‘Your adrenaline’s going to take over,'” Martinez said he told Betts. “‘All you got to do is play catch. Catch it, catch it, repeat, repeat, repeat. That’s all you got to do. Don’t try to hit the ball 700 feet because then you’re going to suck.'”

The last time Betts, 30, took part in a home run-hitting competition was more than two decades ago, at age 8. He was the smallest kid, but he made solid contact consistently enough to finish as the runner-up. Eleven years later, in 2012, he was 19 years old with the Boston Red Sox‘s short-season Class A Lowell Spinners, weighing 155 pounds with hardly any muscle, and didn’t homer in 251 at-bats. He recalled one-hopping the fence just once.

“One double,” Betts said. “I remember that.”

It prompted Betts to seek out former football player Deon Giddens and follow a strict weight-training regimen to help unlock the strength to drive pitches. Betts hit 15 home runs across both Class A levels the following summer and, after breaking into the majors in 2014, hit 31 homers at the highest level in 2016, finishing second in American League MVP voting. His numbers slipped the following year, his batting average dropping from .318 to .264. Then he got to know Martinez.

By the time Martinez joined the Red Sox in 2018, he had saved his career by adopting the launch-angle principles of Craig Wallenbrock and his protégé, current Dodgers hitting coach Robert Van Scoyoc. The Red Sox wanted to revamp their hitting philosophy, and they wanted Martinez to take Betts under his wing. Betts was open to feedback. Martinez wasn’t shy about giving it.

“I want to say it was the first, second day of spring [training],” Betts said. “J.D. got there, we talked, and one of the first things he said was, ‘Bro, you’ve got really good hands. But your swing is trash.'”

Betts had what Martinez described as a cross-body swing that finished low, forcing him to pound off-speed pitches into the ground rather than lifting them into the air. Martinez likened Betts finishing his backswing and gathering himself to someone galloping on a horse. He reminded him of it constantly and, alongside former Red Sox hitting coach Tim Hyers, incorporated drills that got Betts driving toward pitches, dropping his hands before contact and finishing high on his follow-through.

Betts went on to win the AL MVP Award in 2018, amassing 32 home runs while slashing .346/.438/.640. He established himself as the closest rival to Mike Trout as the game’s best player, boasting blazing speed, dynamic defense and elite bat-to-ball skills but also uncommon power.

Betts is now on pace to finish his age-30 season with more than 250 career home runs. Among players listed by Baseball-Reference at 5-9 or shorter and 180 pounds or lighter, only Mel Ott (369) had more by then. Jimmy Rollins (146), Hank Thompson (144) and Jose Altuve (133) are next on the list, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

“It’s physics,” Martinez said when asked to describe how Betts generates power. “If you look at his home runs, where does he hit them? Right over the fence, left field. He’s got great bat-to-ball, hits the ball on the barrel, swinging a 33-ounce bat at this amount of miles per hour, and he’s just catching it on the barrel. That’s it. Hard to do. Not everybody can do it. It’s the same reason Jose Altuve can do it. … I think Altuve’s got a little bit more juice than him, and he uses his legs and can go everywhere on the field. Mook can, too, but he’s got to hit it juuuust right.”

Clayton McCullough is committed to doing everything he can to help him. The Dodgers’ first-base coach will throw to Betts during the Home Run Derby, just as he has during batting practice every day this season — and he isn’t taking any chances.

Throwing in the Derby has been near the forefront of McCullough’s mind since June 30, when the Dodgers arrived in Kansas City for their third-to-last series of the first half and Betts asked him to throw. McCullough began to figure out precisely what distance he should pitch from (Major League Baseball allows some leeway, so he settled on 12 to 12½ paces from the front of the platform to the center of home plate) and talked to Betts about tempo and velocity. The following week, he brought out the official Derby platform (Dodger Stadium has one stored away from last year’s event) and had video coordinator Pedro Montero dress in catcher’s gear to practice throwing middle-in robotically.

Betts, however, didn’t plan on practicing. His swing is finally in what he considers to be a good place, as evidenced by his 1.121 OPS since the start of June, and so his batting-practice sessions have navigated a familiar path in recent days — spraying balls into the left- and right-center-field gaps and, as McCullough said, “controlling the trajectory.” He has no plans to change his swing for the Derby.

“Now,” Betts said, “if this was something that I felt like I could win, then yeah, of course I’d be practicing and all that stuff.”

So you really don’t think you can win, huh?

Betts looks at his right hand and starts pointing to each of his fingers.

“How am I going to beat Julio Rodriguez, Vladdy, Adl …”

You’re Mookie Betts.

“They’re home run hitters,” Betts said, his voice picking up. “They’re bigger guys.”

But you have more home runs than most of them.

“In the game,” he countered. “In the game. Now, you start flipping balls out there — you saw my BP!”

OK, do you have a strategy for preserving energy? Because clearly you’re going to have to exert more of it than others.

“See, now you see where I’m going with it. OK, first three minutes — think about how many homers I got to hit, ’cause I can’t hit the ball 450 feet.”

But the balls are juiced.

“I agree. But you’re telling me my best ball, in a game, with a 95 mile-an-hour fastball, went 420 [it was actually 426 feet]. Now you’re giving me 40 mph, and I’m supposed to hit it 30 feet further?”

All fair points. Betts stressed that he isn’t going to embarrass himself and that he’ll do his best to put on a good performance, but he is not convinced it’s going to matter. That’s what he says, at least. Those who know him well have heard this kind of talk from him before and are quick to note that Betts has always carried the right amount of self-doubt to continue evolving. It’s what made him someone worthy of competing in an event like this in the first place.

They think he might be sandbagging.

“That’s his way of lowering the expectations and being OK with it,” Martinez said. “But deep down inside, I know he wants to win.”

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The Baltimore Orioles are “very, very hopeful” that star shortstop Gunnar Henderson (intercostal strain) will be ready for Opening Day.

Orioles manager Brandon Hyde told reporters Wednesday that Henderson suffered a mild strain on his right side.

“I’m very, very hopeful. But we’re going to not push a strain there, and we want to make sure that he gets it taken care of. It’s one of those sensitive areas where we don’t want anything to reoccur,” Hyde said.

Henderson departed last Thursday’s 11-8 spring training victory over the Toronto Blue Jays after the first inning with what the team termed “lower right side discomfort.” Henderson made a leaping catch in the top of the first inning and apparently felt soreness after hitting the ground.

Henderson is batting .167 in six plate appearances so far this spring.

The 2023 American League Rookie of the Year earned his first All-Star nod in 2024 batting .281/.364/.529 with 37 home runs and 92 RBIs. He also stole 21 bases. He finished fourth in MVP balloting.

Henderson dealt with a left oblique injury during spring training in 2024 but recovered in time for the start of the regular season.

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Astros' Walker out of lineup with oblique soreness

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – New Houston Astros first baseman Christian Walker was scratched from the lineup for a spring training game Wednesday because of soreness in his left oblique.

Walker missed more than a month last season with Arizona because of a strained left oblique muscle. He joined the Astros on a $60 million, three-year contract during the offseason.

In his first four spring training games for Houston, Walker was 4 for 8 with three doubles. He also had two walks.

Adding a first baseman over the offseason was a priority for the Astros after struggling Jose Abreu was released less than halfway through a $58.5 million, three-year contract.

Walker, who turns 34 on March 28, hit .251 with 26 home runs and 84 RBIs in 130 games for the Diamondbacks last season. He won his third consecutive Gold Glove at first base.

In 832 big league games, Walker has hit .250 with 147 homers. All but 13 of those games came with Arizona over the past eight seasons, after his MLB debut with Baltimore in 2014 and 2015.

Walker had two stints on the injured list because of right oblique issues in 2021. He played 160 games in 2022 and 157 in 2023, hitting 69 homers and driving in 197 runs combined over those two seasons.

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HOF vet committee tweak limits future appearances

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HOF vet committee tweak limits future appearances

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — The Hall of Fame made some small adjustments to its veterans committee system to limit people with relatively little support from repeatedly remaining on future ballots, a decision that could make it harder to gain entry to Cooperstown for steroids-tainted stars such as Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens.

Any candidate on the eight-person ballot who receives fewer than five votes from the 16-member panel will not be eligible for that committee’s ballot during the next three-year cycle, the hall said Wednesday. A candidate who is dropped, later reappears on a ballot and again receives fewer than five votes would be barred from future ballot appearances.

Bonds, Clemens, Rafael Palmeiro and Albert Belle each received fewer than four votes in December 2022, when Fred McGriff was a unanimous pick. Bonds and Clemens were on a hall ballot for the first time since their 10th and final appearances on the Baseball Writers’ Association of America ballot. The rules change could limit reappraisals of their candidacies.

In addition, the historical overview committee appointed by the BBWAA that selects the ballot candidates must also be approved by the hall’s board of directors. The hall said the decisions were made by its board during a Feb. 26 meeting in Orlando, Florida.

In 2022, the hall restructured its veterans committees for the third time in 12 years, setting up panels to consider the contemporary era from 1980 on, as well as the classic era. The contemporary baseball era holds separate ballots for players and another for managers, executives and umpires.

Each committee meets every three years: contemporary players from 1980 on will be considered this December; managers, executives and umpires from 1980 on in December 2026; and pre-1980 candidates in December 2027.

Dave Parker and Dick Allen were elected last December and manager Jim Leyland in December 2023.

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