Josh Hamilton collects single in 'jumpy' 1st rehab start at Triple-A

by George Halim
Rick Scuteri / USA TODAY Sports

Josh Hamilton's oft-traveled road back to the big leagues began with a bloop single and ended with two strikeouts, but it was still a step in the right direction.

The Texas Rangers' Triple-A affiliate Round Rock Express were downed 7-0 by Nashville, the Oakland Athletics' Triple-A squad, with the win awarded to fellow veteran Barry Zito.

After singling in the first, Hamilton, who made his first rehab start of the season, struck out twice against Zito, once looking and once swinging.

"I was a little jumpy at the plate, which is to be expected," Hamilton said to reporters after the game, adding that he feels good, given this is his version of spring training.

"I could find it as early as tomorrow or a week from now. And that's what the fun and frustrating part of the game is," he said. "Any given year you can come to spring training and feel really good right off the bat. Then there's some other years it takes a little longer."

Before coming over to the Los Angeles Angels in 2013, Hamilton strung together five consecutive All-Star seasons in which he was named a silver slugger in three of them and the MVP in 2010.

But in two seasons with the Angels, his career was riddled with off-field issues, which translated negatively to the diamond. In 240 games, he batted .255/.316/.426 with 31 home runs, 123 RBIs and 53 doubles.

It's not often a player is ecstatic about being in the minors, but Hamilton was beaming ahead of the game as reporters flooded the visitors dugout to dissect what was going through his head.

"I'm back in a situation where I've had some success and we've won ballgames, so it is a good place to come back to," he said. "No expectations other than to have fun, and if I do that with a smile on my face the results are going to be there."

The Digest

Everything you need to know about Josh Hamilton's drug relapse

by theScore staff
Rick Scuteri-USA TODAY Sports

Outfielder Josh Hamilton, who has a history of addiction problems with cocaine and alcohol, will not receive punishment from Major League Baseball after a relapse involving at least cocaine. Hamilton's case was decided by an independent arbitrator after a four-person MLB drug panel failed to decide if the outfielder should enter a treatment program.

Hamilton was suspended from baseball from 2004-06 for cocaine- and alcohol-related issues. He signed a five-year, $125-million contract before the 2013 season.

Need to Know

  • L.A. manager Mike Scioscia visited with Hamilton in mid-April, but left unsure whether or not Hamilton is getting the treatment he needs as the outfielder rehabs his shoulder.
  • Angels lefty C.J. Wilson took Hamilton's side with some criticism of the organization.
  • The independent arbitrator ruled that Hamilton's conduct did not violate his treatment program and as a result he is not eligible to be disciplined by the Office of the Commissioner
     
  • Hamilton had a relapse involving "at least cocaine" and informed baseball officials, according to Jon Heyman of CBS Sports. Hamilton's father-in-law, Michael Chadwick, tweeted that the player has "hit a bump in the road, keep him in your prayers."
  • The MLB Players Association threw its support behind the outfielder after multiple news leaks followed Hamilton's latest relapse.

Further Reading

  • Lyle Spencer believes the Angels are doing Hamilton a favor with the deal to the Rangers [MLB.com]
  • Ken Rosenthal writes that the Rangers acquisition of Hamilton might be the perfect diversion in a season that won't likely end with playoff games in October. [FoxSports
  • Passan believes that new commissioner Rob Manfred needs to do what's right and that Hamilton's case should be about his addiction and only his addiction. [Yahoo
  • Sports Illustrated's Cliff Corcoran looks at the two different ways to view Hamilton - the drug user whose confession of a relapse may have been timed to prevent it coming out after a test in camp - or the man with an illness that he fought with for most of his baseball career. [SI.com]
  • DiGiovanna and Shaikin discuss the money at stake along with his health and well-being. Hamilton is due to make $25 million this season. [LA Times]
     
  • Jeremy Horton of The Classical put a brilliant capper on the Hamilton situation, making the case that the latest relapse does nothing to take away from Hamilton's redemption story. Horton notes an addict's struggle is as difficult as it gets and Hamilton's period of sobriety is still a badge to be worn proudly. [The Classical

Timeline

1999 - Tampa Bay Rays make Hamilton the first overall pick in the June draft and sign him to a then-record $3.96-million bonus.

2002 - Hamilton sent to Betty Ford Center for drug rehabilitation. In July, fails first drug test while on rehab assignment for Triple-A Durham (15 games)

2003 - While inactive list for Orlando (minors) fails drug test in May (30 games). Fails second test in September (60 games)

2004 - In February, suspended for violating MLB joint drug treatment and prevention program.

2006 - In June, is reinstated by MLB to participate in Tampa's extended spring training. Selected by Cubs in Rule 5 draft and traded to Reds.

2007 - Makes MLB debut April 2 as member of Cincinnati Reds. Traded to Texas Rangers for Edinson Volquez in December.

2009 - Suffers relapse in January, drinking alcohol for first time in 3 1/2 years.

2012 - Suffers alcohol-related relapse in January. Signs 5-year deal with Angels in December.

2015 - In February, suffers relapse involving cocaine. Is traded back to the Rangers in April.

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