Swisher adds energy, enthusiasm to Indians

2/21/2013
ASSOCIATED PRESS

GOODYEAR, Ariz. — Rain, wind, and general gloominess reported to the Indians' spring training camp on Wednesday, forcing the club to move batting practice and pitchers’ workouts inside.

The change seemed to ruin the day for a few players.

Nick Swisher wasn't one of them. In Swisher's world, it's 80 and sunny, not a cloud in sight.

Always, bro.

"Hey, that's just who I am," the Indians’ first baseman said, flashing an infectious smile that never seems to fade. "I've been this way since I was like 6."

Swisher, who signed a four-year, $56 million contract — the largest for a free agent in Cleveland history — this winter, has brought his endless energy and enthusiasm to the Indians, a club desperately needing an infusion of something following a painful 94-loss season.

While there's some who wonder whether he's putting on an act, the 32-year-old Swisher, a former Ohio State star, says he's just being himself.

"It's funny," he said. "I've been doing this for 10 years, bro, and people still question it. It's me being me — whether you like it or not."

Swisher never stops. Just watch him for a minute in the Indians' clubhouse.

After shedding his batting gloves and dropping them on a chair, he bounces over to the refrigerator to grab a drink. Without pause, he closes the door, spins off, and heads toward the bathroom, greeting everyone he passes with a head nod, back slap, or saying their nickname. Then it's back to his locker, where he stops for a moment to do to an interview.

Not yet, though. Jason Giambi is leaving.

"All right, Big G," Swisher hollers to his teammate. "I'll see you later, bro."

This is where Swisher wants to be most, hanging out with his teammates, the guys he'll be around for most of the next eight months. And for the duration, count on him being Nick Swisher, Mr. Excitement.

"I'm going to be me every single day, and maybe I've just been blessed to have that inner passion for this game," he said. "And maybe that's why it comes out as much as it does because there's nothing else in the world that I'd rather be doing, other than spending time with my family, than being at the ballpark."

One of three AL players to hit at least 20 homers in each of the last eight seasons, Swisher has averaged 26 homers, 83 RBIs and played in 149 games per season since 2005. He has been consistent and productive, and the Indians are counting on him to keep it up.

But what they don't want him to do is try to do anything more. If Swisher can match the .272 average with 24 homers, 93 RBIs and .364 on-base percentage, the Indians will take it.

"All he has to do is be himself, and that's easier said than done," new Indians manager Terry Francona said. "It's something we've talked about and will continue to talk about. He doesn't have to carry the team on his shoulders."

INDIANS HALL OF FAME: Carlos Baerga and John Hart helped make history with the Indians, and they're linked again.

Baerga, a three-time All-Star second baseman whose acquisition in a trade with catcher Sandy Alomar, Jr., sparked Cleveland's rise to an AL power, and Hart, the crafty general manager who got the Indians to two World Series in the 1990s, were named Wednesday as the newest members of the club's Hall of Fame. They will be inducted on June 22 during a ceremony before the Indians host Minnesota at Progressive Field.