|
"Any time you go to a new team with a new group of guys, regardless whether it is New York or Kansas City, it will take some time to get adjusted," he said. "You don't feel like you're really part of the team until you have done something to help the team."
Berkman sat in the opener against the Twins, then was dropped to eighth in the batting order for Game 2. He put the Yankees ahead 2-1 with a fifth-inning solo homer. Then, just after Orlando Hudson's homer tied the score, Berkman gave New York the lead for good with an RBI double in the seventh.
Granderson sympathized with Berkman's plight of switching teams in the summer. When Granderson joined the Yankees, he had spring training to adjust.
"I had that first-day-of-school kind of mentality," Granderson said. "But when you come right in the middle of it, it's always a little bit difficult -- especially just learning the names. Yeah, you know some names, but there's a lot of guys you haven't seen before and until they turn around and see their number on their back, you don't know who it is, at first."
New arrivals spark a learning process. And not just for the players, but for the staff.
Long likes to study a player for an extended period before making suggestions. The process for pitchers is similar, and adjustments pitching coach Dave Eiland made with Kerry Wood after he arrived at the trade deadline helped turn him into a consistent setup man for Mariano Rivera.
"I know when we got Kerry Wood, Dave went right away and started watching video," manager Joe Girardi said. "What made Kerry successful? We went back as far as the 20 strikeout game to look at that. Kevin Long looked at years that Lance Berkman was successful and what he was doing in his stance and all those different things. That's the power of video."
Only now does Berkman really think he belongs in baseball's starriest and wealthiest clubhouse. When he first arrived, he felt perhaps not quite like an intruder, but a bit of a visitor.
"I don't think you can take quite as much joy in a victory or the ultimate victory -- let's say we won the World Series -- if you don't participate," he said. "If you are just sitting on the bench and watching and don't do anything, it is hard to take as much joy as if you help them win the game."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor