FORT MYERS, Fla. – People are constantly butchering his name, Ehire Adrianza says. It's pronounced AY-ray, but more than one non-Spanish speaker has addressed him as EE-hire, like the job-recruiting website.
Then again, maybe that version was appropriate. Because over the course of two uneasy weeks, the Venezuelan shortstop lost his job, found another, then lost it, too. Suddenly, he worried that the 27-year-old Ehire was going to need ehire.
"It was getting so close to spring training, all the teams pretty much had wrapped up their camp rosters. I wouldn't say it was scary, but I guess I was pretty anxious. That close to spring training, I want to know where I'll be," Adrianza said of being waived twice and claimed twice as January turned to February. "It was upsetting. It's the first time it's happened to me. But it worked out pretty well."
Adrianza had been in the Giants system for 12 seasons, since signing as a 16-year-old, and a big leaguer for parts of the past four. He helped the Giants get to the 2014 World Series, and watched from the dugout (because of a hamstring injury) as they won a championship. But last month, the Giants, having signed Jimmy Rollins for a utility role, took him off their roster. The Brewers claimed him on Jan. 31 — then waived him again two days later.
"It was kind of weird. I talked to their general manager [David Stearns], and he told me, 'Hey man, welcome to the team, glad to have you,' all that kind of stuff," Adrianza said. "Then two days later he called back and said, 'We needed a first baseman [they claimed Jesus Aguilar from the Indians], so we took you off the roster. We'd love for you to stay, but it's a business.' "
He was nervous for a weekend, but then got some good news: The Twins, a little nervous themselves about their infield defense, had claimed him. Considering his offseason home is in Miami, a two-hour drive from Fort Myers, Adrianza was thrilled.
Paul Molitor might be, too. The Twins manager has been blunt this winter about his desire to shore up Minnesota's defense. Advanced statistics say Adrianza is not only the sharpest infield glove on the roster — albeit a bright orange-and-black one at the moment, his Giants-colors glove — but that it's not even close.
Ultimate Zone Rating, projected over 150 games, pegs Adrianza at the level of Francisco Lindor, Andrelton Simmons and Brandon Crawford — recognized as the slickest fielding shortstops in the game. His career average UZR/150 of 19.8 would make him the best infield glove man the Twins have had in more than a decade, if he played more games.