Drew joins McGwire on Cardinals marquee
The Associated Press 3/14/99
Major league pitching doesn't appear to pose a problem
for J.D. Drew, and you won't catch him worrying about
a hostile reception in Philadelphia, either.
Mark McGwire just might have a new co-star in the
23-year-old can't-miss kid, who'll bat in front of him
in the St. Louis Cardinals' lineup this season.
"He's a stud," McGwire said. "J.D. is the real deal."
Drew held out for a year after the Phillies drafted
him in 1997, then was re-drafted by the Cardinals last
June and agreed to a $7 million, four-year contract,
an unprecedented amount for a draft pick.
His holdout angered some veterans, who felt he hadn't
paid his dues.
Eric Davis, who'll play in the outfield with Drew,
said last year he hated Drew even though he had never
met him.
Reliever Ricky Bottalico, who was with the spurned
Phillies last year, warned Drew to expect consequences
when the Cardinals made their first trip to
Philadelphia on Aug. 9.
McGwire criticized Drew as a greedy kid who wanted it
all before he had earned a cent and used the Drew case
as an example of why there should be limits on rookie
salaries.
"If you're around him on a personal level, you're
really impressed with how he's been raised," manager
Tony La Russa said. "Other than baseball, he's very
polite, very respectful."
Drew knew all he had to do was be himself.
"After a little while, my story got out a little
better and people kind of understood what the
situations were," Drew said. "Once you walk in the
clubhouse you're a baseball player and everyone is the
same. You compete, you play hard, you try to win games
for your team."
Drew was cast as a villain during his acrimonious
holdout from the Phillies, during which agent Scott
Boras repeatedly asserted that all he wanted for his
client was fair market value.
When the Cardinals signed him, general manager Walt
Jocketty said Drew, who has drawn comparisons to
Mickey Mantle, could be a 30-40 homer man soon. Farm
director Mike Jorgensen was skeptical at first, so he
went down to watch Drew play for Double-A Arkansas,
where Drew quickly began putting up big numbers. After
batting practice and the first three innings,
Jorgensen knew what all the fuss had been about.
"Boom! I was a believer," he said. "It was like this
guy was a big leaguer already."
After a 14-game trial last September, the Cardinals
were so impressed they made no effort to re-sign team
favorite Brian Jordan, freeing an outfield spot. Drew
hit .417 with five home runs and 13 RBIs.
He also demonstrated a tough mental makeup when he
answered the cascades of boos that greeted him in
Cincinnati, his first road game, with a 438-foot home
run. He knows it'll be worse, probably a lot worse,
when the Cardinals head to Philadelphia for the first
time.
"I don't know what's going to happen or how it's going
to be," Drew said. "I look forward to going through
the season and seeing new cities and just seeing the
outcome of everything."
La Russa said that response was just another example
of how Drew is special.
"Sure, it isn't his favorite way to be received, but
it probably helped him concentrate," he said.
"Anything that puts that little chip on your shoulder
makes you better. Fans are probably helping him by
agitating. Some people try to hide. Not J.D."
All this buildup is making it tough for La Russa to
pretend Drew still must win the left-field job.
"I think it's going to be real healthy for him and his
teammates to know he had to play his way onto the
club," La Russa said. "If he has a terrible spring,
that's going to indicate he's not ready. "
Fat chance. Batting ahead in the No. 3 spot ahead of
McGwire means it's likely he'll see plenty of good
pitches.
"They'll be more apt to go at him," said McGwire, who
set an NL record with 162 walks last season. "If he
does what he's capable of doing, and from what I've
seen I've been impressed, he'll have a really good
year."
Drew just hopes he can live up to the expectations.
"God has blessed me with talent to play the game, and
fortunately he's given me some success," he said. "I
just go out and work hard every day and it just
happens, I guess. Hopefully I'll have a couple
4-for-4s here and there, and I know I'm going to take
my 0-for-4s, but just let me play hard and do the
things it takes to help us win ballgames."
And in time, he hopes his ability will win him
universal acceptance.
"It's not me against the world," he said. "People are
going to interpret me the way they want to, and I've
just got to go out there and prove them wrong.
Hopefully they'll respect me for that."
copyright The Associated Press
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