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Daniel Bard after outing: ‘I feel like I have something to prove’ 02.21.13 at 4:41 pm ET
By Rob Bradford

Daniel Bard was pleased with his outing Thursday afternoon. (AP)

FORT MYERS, Fla. – So, what to make of Daniel Bard’s first appearance of the spring – a one-inning outing against Northeastern at JetBlue Park Thursday afternoon, in which he struck out the side.

Catcher David Ross: “Bardo struggled early on and then found it. He actually made adjustment midway through the inning and looked sharp. But early on it was just trying to get his body under control. Even though we’re going up against college kids, there’s still some adrenaline. I had some nerves and adrenaline today.

“I caught him in two bullpens. I think he’s working on some things mechanically. What’s promising is that when he got out of whack with his fastball he flipped that breaking ball out there, which is a good sign to me as a catcher. He has a very good slider, and a very good changeup.”

Manager John Farrell: “He went from a guy who was ultra-aggressive and ultra-confident to one who, with the change in role came a change in mindset. We’re getting back to that shorter stint and aggressive mentality. That’s something he set out to establish or regain and prove. Today was the first step in that process.

“In conversation and in side work, in BP, yeah, I don’t think it’s going to happen over night. The one thing we want to do is establish the aggressiveness first, and if we have to make some adjustments to gain more consistent command, that might be the case. The first step is more from the mentality side of things.

“At times, he leveraged it downhill, his delivery was on time. There were other times you could see him come off the pitch where he’d run it up and in to a right-hander. That’s not totally unexpected.”

Bard: “I’m satisfied. Not perfect obviously, but it’s a huge step in the right direction. It’s always good to get out of the gate with some good results. The focus today was just being in the zone as much as possible. I threw two pitches for strikes. Just go from there. …

“It was exciting. The live BP, I don’t think I got any swings. I was happy with how I threw the ball but they were just tracking pitches. This was the first real adrenaline rush. It’s a lot of fun.”

The pitcher would finish his 18-pitch outing throwing 13 strikes, while only allowing a leadoff single to the Huskies’ Connor Lyons.

As mentioned by Ross, the reliever struggled with fastball command early on before straightening himself out, thanks in part to the use of an effective slider.

“I think sometimes some pitchers to slow them down you call breaking balls. I think that’s the process that you use,” Ross explained. “I thought early on he was just leaving fastball arm-side, and it was running up and in. He settled down a little later, getting the ball back down and away, which is what I want. When righties can throw the ball glove-side down and away that is a key for us as a safety valve to go to, especially with him being as good as he is.”

“He doesn’t overthrow his secondary stuff as he might with his fastball, and that’s just the counter-adjustment from pitch to pitch,” Farrell said. “That’s probably the most encouraging thing. He didn’t get into a three or four pitch sequence where he was missing to the arm side. There was the ability to make the adjustment in one or two pitches.”

All in all, Bard came away from the exercise feeling he had taken a much-welcome step in the right direction.

“The last time I really came into camp with something to prove was my first big league spring training in ’09,” said Bard, whose next outing will be Monday in Port Charlotte against the Rays. “I was not supposed to make the team by any means, but I had a lot of people I was supposed to impress in my mind. I was able to come out and do that, and win a spot about a month later in the bullpen. It’s not that much different this year, besides the fact that everyone knows my name and knows who I am. But I feel like I have something to prove.”

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  • kozlodoev

    Yes, you have to prove you can still throw a 99 mph fastball. So far — fail!

  • innovator1

    There’s a big part of me that wishes that David Ross was catching 120 games for us this year…No disrespects to Salty,who works very hard,and is likeable,but ross will make our staff BETTER!

  • Bard feels good

    Still has mechanical issues. Major leaguers would tee off. Needs to get the power fast ball back if he still has the velocity. Time will tell. Today was batting peactice against below AAA.

  • Kingkelly

    You go, Daniel. Get the cobwebs out, build confidence without overthinking, an excellent first step.    And you, Rob… with a clear eye on what happened to Bard last year, and in the spirit of what it ought to mean to be the reigning Marconi winner… you can show some leadership on this…
    You can model self-awareness and moderation when Cherington and Farrell stress to Bard that they don’t want his every pitch or move to become a daily story… then go out of their own way to share that message with YOU and the rest of the NE media.  
    You can help the swollen media posse to cover Bard as they would Tazawa, Breslow, Morales or Bailey — hey, all four of them have special story lines, too – and to NOT crawl all over Bard with the suffocating excess they showed last year.  It contributed a bad helper effect as Daniel spiraled downward from a pitcher with muddled mechanics to an overthinking train wreck.  
    You and your guys can lead the way to not encourage a well-spoken kid to talk through every pitch that worked or didn’t work after EVERY outing… and to NOT scratch his chin out loud over just what it means if his heater was ONLY ninety-four… and what’s his plan for NEXT time when the hitters are tougher and if, you know, his fastball command is still shaky?  And…   
    The weei.com writers were not the worst offenders last year, by any means.  And run of the Hot Stove Show, was the best piece of boutique sports talk to hit the local airways in ages.  Thanks and major kudos to Mini for hosting, and for you and Alex, and your varied guests.  That show (among its many, many positives) set a really high standard for media self-awareness without being preachy, often without even being overt about it.  
    Media self-awareness is a good thing.  Let’s don’t not stop now.

  • H Bouley

    at this point just glad to know Bard found the long lost strike zone. That batters werent ducking, skipping rope and running for their lives LOL  Spring training mlb games have yet to start. Plenty of time to show increased velocity. A return to his 97-100 mph fastball would be teriffic.

  • H Bouley

    during previous spring training games before last years disaster  I dont think Bard ever went full bore with his fastball right out of the gate.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Michael-Kenney/100003003430824 Michael Kenney

    Sox did Bard a disservice last year trying to make him a starter and the price paid by all was steep.  Now Bard has to regain his confidence by recapturing his aggressiveness, mechanics, control and most of his previous speed on the fastball. This outing is a small step in that direction and, hopefully, the progress can continue without any setbacks.  I, for one, wish him great success and hope he is on his way.

  • MOLLY

    omg is Danial hurt. I am looking at the picture above. LOL everybody. Trying to lighten it up. This kid is back. He blew the batters away. He is confident and throwing with ease. Great to have him back. He will be lights out all year. ALSO LOOKS QUITE CUTE WITH THAT HAIRCUT!!!   

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