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Left? Center? Gonzalez just happy to be healthy.

Rockies’ outfielder and slugger has put his injuries, surgeries behind him
Who’s finally healthy? This guy. “I feel good. I recovered really well after the surgery. I got my weight back (to 225 pounds), and I’m ready to go,” said Carlos Gonzalez, the Colorado Rockies’ left fielder and middle-of-the-lineup slugger.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Carlos Gonzalez insists moving from left to center field at spacious Coors Field won’t be a problem.

Staying healthy may be the bigger issue for the Colorado Rockies slugger.

Dominant at the plate and in the field when he can play, Gonzalez is eager to show he can log 145 games again after finger and wrist injuries have slowed him in recent years.

His bad luck continued even after the season when he needed an emergency appendectomy. And when doctors were performing that surgery, they discovered a hernia that needed repair.

“I’m really glad it happened in the offseason,” Gonzalez said Friday. “I feel good. I recovered really well after the surgery. I got my weight back (to 225 pounds), and I’m ready to go.”

Gonzalez just isn’t sure where he’ll be going. When the season ended and the Rockies traded speedy center fielder Dexter Fowler to Houston, Gonzalez was sure he was taking his Gold Glove to center.

But then Colorado acquired Drew Stubbs from Cleveland. And while manager Walt Weiss said Gonzalez will start the spring in center, he revealed Saturday that Gonzalez will remain in left so Charlie Blackmon, Corey Dickerson and Drew Stubbs will play for time in center.

“Offensively, defensively, we’ll look at how the club is designed, and we’ll make a decision accordingly,” Weiss said before Saturday’s decision. “We’ve got multiple options in center field.”

The three-time Gold Glove winner was fine with the move, as long as he sticks in one spot.

“You don’t want to be bouncing around,” Gonzalez said. “That’s something I did early in my career, and it was affecting me physically and mentally. So I’m ready to play in one position, and whatever position is good, either center or left.”

Gonzalez covering all that ground and making longer throws won’t be that much of an adjustment because left field is spacious in Denver, too.

“In Coors Field you have to play the outfield,” Gonzalez said. “Left field, especially, those big corners, and you have to cover a lot of ground. When you go on the road you feel like, ‘OK, I’m going to have a couple days off now.’”

The Rockies, coming off an injury-riddled 74-88 season, need Gonzalez to not have so many real days off.

In 2010, the Venezuela native hit .336 to win the National League batting title and was third in the MVP voting. It earned him a seven-year, $80.5-million contract.

But the 28-year-old hasn’t played more than 135 games in any season since.

Gonzalez had 26 home runs July 20, but he didn’t hit another the rest of the way because of the troublesome finger injury that led to a lengthy stint on the disabled list.

“Yeah, it was a tough time for me because I wanted to play baseball,” Gonzalez said. “I was having a great year, but things happen.”

Gonzalez decided against offseason surgery, but he has moved his right hand up on the bat in hopes he won’t aggravate it.

If Gonzalez, All-Star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki, reigning NL batting champ Michael Cuddyer and newly acquired Justin Morneau stay healthy, the Rockies will present a fearsome lineup.

And Gonzalez is more concerned with staying in that lineup than his spot in the outfield.

“I try to get ready every single year to help this club, and if it’s going to be in center field, I’m going to be excited to do it,” Gonzalez said.

Gonzalez will remain in left field

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Colorado Rockies’ manager Walt Weiss said slugger Carlos Gonzalez will remain in left field rather than move over to center to replace Dexter Fowler.

Moving CarGo to center had been a strong possibility ever since the Rockies traded Fowler to Houston over the winter.

Weiss revealed the decision Saturday.

But the Rockies later acquired Drew Stubbs from Cleveland, and Stubbs can platoon in center with Charlie Blackmon or Corey Dickerson, who can back up all three outfield spots.

Gonzalez said he’d be fine with a move to center field so long as he didn’t bounce back and forth as he had earlier in his career. He said that affected him both mentally and physically.

Gonzalez is a three-time Gold Glove winner.

Rockies rumpus

Rockies’ manager Walt Weiss said they plan to keep five outfielders on the major league roster. ... A dark horse in the outfield competition could be Corey Dickerson, an eighth-round pick in 2010. “I think he’s a pure hitter,” Weiss said. “He plays with an edge.” ... Weiss is putting a lot of thought into the opening message he’ll give before the first full squad workout Sunday. “It’s important, to set a tone, to set the expectations,” he said. “We’re talking about trying to create an identity.”



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