Boston Red Sox's David Ortiz waits to take batting practice during baseball practice Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, in Boston. The Red Sox are preparing to play the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1 of the World Series on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)
BOSTON â David Ortiz missed nearly half of last yearâs disastrous Red Sox season with a heel injury. Then he was sidelined with it throughout spring training and the start of this season.
There were whispers that the slugger who had won two World Series titles with Boston was at the end of the line.
And Big Papi heard them.
âPeople are always going to talk trash,â the slugging designated hitter said Tuesday. âYouâre never going to make everyone happy so what you do is just come in, do your thing and what can those people do about it? In my case, Iâm done putting attention to what people have to say.â
Theyâve been saying nice things going into tonightâs opener against the St. Louis Cardinals.
Ortiz led the Red Sox with a .309 batting average, 30 homers and 103 RBIs this season. In Game 2 of the AL championship series against the Detroit Tigers, he hit a game-tying grand slam in the eighth. Boston won 6-5 on Jarrod Saltalamacchiaâs RBI single in the ninth.
But Ortiz makes a huge contribution off the field with his bubbly personality and winning smile.
Cardinals reliever Randy Choate saw that when he was playing baseball in the Dominican Republic in the offseason.
âWe had a pickup softball game and it was an off day and we were all hanging out,â he said. âI remember someone threw one and he hit one, literally, 500 feet. It was unbelievable, but he was just there having a good time and hanging out with everybody, being down to earth.â
Red Sox third baseman Will Middlebrooks was in awe when he saw Ortiz the first time he went to spring training.
âHe carries himself very well,â Middlebrooks said. âJust the confidence he has rubs off on everybody. Then last year, getting to know him, being able to work with him, all the things heâs done for this game, being there to help the rookies, heâs such an open book. Thatâs what surprised me the most.â
But last year was a tough one.
The Red Soxâs 69-93 record was their worst in nearly half a century. Bobby Valentineâs stint as manager ended when he was fired after his first season.
Ortiz hit .318 with 23 homers and 60 RBIs but played in just 90 games.
âWhat happened last year was kind of a freak of an injury,â Red Sox outfielder Daniel Nava said, âbut what he was doing before that point, everyone saw that he was locked in. If there ever was a time to say âPapiâs got more life in him,â it was then. Heâs also become a smarter hitter.â
When Ortizâs heel injury persisted in spring training, the fansâ worries continued. But not for the players.
âWe knew what was going on,â Nava said. âObviously, you canât relay everything to the public, so since we had the inside track I wasnât worried. I donât think anyone else was worried. We knew he was going to be back.â
Now he has a chance for his third championship in 10 years, and Cardinals pitchers know the damage he can do.
âI donât think I would be overwhelmedâ facing him, starter Joe Kelly said. âI just see him as another big power left-handed hitter like Adrian Gonzalez. Heâs just another guy who can do damage with guys on base if youâre not careful.â
Joaquin Benoit wasnât careful.
So Ortiz tagged the Tigers closer for the grand slam that turned around the ALCS.
Cardinals closer Trevor Rosenthal saw that homer.
âI think even without that, you knew that heâs going to have the opportunity to make a huge impact with one swing,â he said.
And if he puts Boston ahead late, closer Koji Uehara is likely to save the game and then get picked up and carried over Ortizâs shoulder â a trademark of recent wins.
âI donât mind,â Uehara said. âHeâs obviously the face of the team. If heâs doing well, our team is also going to do well.â