ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS

Martin Prado making his presence felt early with D-backs

Feb 26, 2013, 2:28 PM | Updated: 2:44 pm

LISTEN: Martin Prado, D-Backs third baseman

It didn’t take long for fans of the Arizona Diamondbacks to get a taste of what kind of player Martin Prado is.

In the first inning of the D-backs’ Cactus League opener last Saturday against the Colorado Rockies, Willie Bloomquist led off the inning with a double to right field. Gerardo Parra followed with a ground ball to the right side to advance Bloomquist to third base with one out.

Prado, hitting third, did what he’s known for — the little things. With the infield back, Prado grounded out to second base, but it was enough to score Bloomquist from third and put the Diamondbacks on the board.

“During batting practice, I actually put all the situations in my mind so I can execute it in B.P.,” Prado told D-backs broadcasters Greg Schulte and Jeff Munn on the Hot Stove Show Monday night on Arizona Sports 620. “As soon as the game is on, you probably have an idea, because you’ve practiced it. So when that situation is on, hey, I’ve been doing this in batting practice.

“I’ve been doing that for four years and been getting good results.”

Prado, acquired in January from Atlanta in the trade that sent Justin Upton to the Braves, isn’t lying when he talks about those results.

In 2012, Prado hit .301, good for 11th in the National League. Additionally, he only struck out 69 times in 617 at bats, making him the seventh-toughest player to strike out in the senior circuit.

Prado, who had been with the Braves organization since signing as a 17-year-old in 2001, admits being traded to the Diamondbacks was tough initially.

“It was a little difficult for me, but for some reason, the last two years they were talking about trading me — there were a lot of rumors,” Prado said. “I got the idea in my mind like, ‘this is going to happen at some point in my career.’

“I wasn’t totally prepared mentally, but at the same time, I understood. This is a business and I did everything I could to help the team to win and be the best teammate, the best player that I could be there and that’s all I could control. I couldn’t control who was going to trade me and who was not. But I’m happy where I am, I’m in a good spot and I’m looking forward to keep doing what I was doing.”

Comments

Comment guidelines: No name-calling, personal attacks, profanity, or insults. Please keep the conversation civil and help us moderate comments by reporting abuse.
comments powered by Disqus

Arizona Diamondbacks

Corbin Carroll...

Alex Weiner

Diamondbacks OF Corbin Carroll ready to ‘migrate north’ in batting order

Corbin Carroll had been hitting in the bottom third in the lineup, and manager Torey Lovullo teased he would be moving back up.

9 hours ago

Joc Pederson...

Alex Weiner

‘Mad’ Diamondbacks aim to build off hitting outburst from win over Padres

Every few days this season it seems the Arizona Diamondbacks muster a dominant offensive outburst to blowout an opponent. 

21 hours ago

Ketel Marte...

Arizona Sports

Diamondback bats come alive after stretch of poor offensive showings

After a recent stretch of poor offense, the D-backs finally turned the bats on in Sunday's game against the San Diego Padres at Chase Field.

23 hours ago

Eduardo Rodriguez...

Alex Weiner

Diamondbacks’ Lovullo gives encouraging updates on Rodriguez, Sewald

Veteran pitchers Eduardo Rodriguez and Paul Sewald were in the Diamondbacks' clubhouse Sunday, and Torey Lovullo gave encouraging updates. 

1 day ago

Ryne Nelson...

Arizona Sports

Diamondbacks activate RHP Ryne Nelson off injured list, option LHP Brandon Hughes to Reno

The Diamondbacks activated pitcher Ryne Nelson off the 15-day injured list ahead of Sunday's ballgame against the Padres. 

1 day ago

Ketel Marte...

Alex Weiner

Diamondbacks crushed by Padres in nightmarish stretch: ‘We’re pretty frustrated’

Brandon Pfaadt battled, but it was otherwise a tough night at the ballpark for the Diamondbacks in a lopsided loss to the Padres.

2 days ago

Martin Prado making his presence felt early with D-backs