The Colorado Rockies finalized a $5 million, one-year contract to bring back three-time All-Star and popular clubhouse leader Carlos Gonzalez.
His agreement was announced Monday and includes $3 million in bonuses based on days on the active roster.
Gonzalez had a $20 million salary last year in the final season of an $80 million, seven-year contract and became a free agent after nine seasons with the Rockies. The three-time Gold Glove outfielder struggled for most of last season as the Rockies returned to the postseason for the first time since 2009. He showed signs of breaking out of his funk down the stretch, though, hitting six of his 14 homers in September.
His reawakening bat happened to coincide with his ability to get some restful sleep. CarGo struggled with insomnia last summer and the more he slumped on the field – he was hitting .214 in mid-July – the worse his sleeping habits became. The pattern was all-too-familiar each night – get home from a game, think about it, watch movies or TV until around 3 a.m. and fitfully fall asleep only to wake up tired.
Gonzalez said a touch of insomnia is something that’s plagued him for years in large part because of all the travel. Last August, he began talking to a sleep specialist, who recommended such things as keeping his room cool and dark, having his phone out of reach and no movies after games to help his slumber. That helped him get a solid seven hours of sleep each night.
This also helped: Tweaking his grip on the bat. The left-hander hit .377 in September.
”It’s not like we’re re-inventing something or trying to change my swing,” Gonzalez explained last season. ”I was trying to stay calm, lower my hands, not over-swing. I was trying to put a good swing to the ball. Stay in the zone.”
Gonzalez was a member of the Rockies team that went to the playoffs in 2009. The team returned to the postseason last season but lost 11-8 at Arizona in the NL wild-card game as Gonzalez went 2 for 5 with an RBI.
The 32-year-old was acquired from Oakland on Nov. 12, 2008, as part of a deal that sent Matt Holliday to the Athletics. Gonzalez could not find a long-term deal in a cool market for free agents and returns to a crowded outfield that includes reigning NL batting champion Charlie Blackmon, good friend Gerardo Parra, Ian Desmond, Raimel Tapia and David Dahl, who missed last season with a rib injury.
Signed by Arizona in 2002, Gonzalez was traded in 2007 to Oakland, where he broke into the big leagues. He’s a .288 hitter with 215 homers and 711 RBIs in 1,200 games.
Gonzalez is a charismatic character in the clubhouse, even when he’s mired in slumps. He’s frequently bouncing from one conversation to the next, with manager Bud Black saying last season: ”They really enjoy Carlos as a teammate and respect his tenure.”
In his time with the Rockies, Gonzalez has five seasons with 25 or more homers, won the 2010 NL batting title with a .336 average and hit for the cycle on July 31, 2010, against the Chicago Cubs.
He’s struggled with injuries in recent seasons, missing time in 2017 with a strained right shoulder. He was hobbled in 2014 after hurting his index finger and later undergoing knee surgery.
His 211 homers with Colorado are the fourth-most homers in team history, trailing only Todd Helton (369), Larry Walker (258) and Vinny Castilla (239). Gonzalez is fourth among Rockies with 245 doubles and fifth in RBIs with 685.
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AP Baseball Writer Ronald Blum contributed to this report.
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