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Easley Gets His Chance With Angels in a Hurry

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

At first glance, he could be mistaken for a batboy, so young does Damion Easley look in his Angel uniform.

“Maybe,” he said, laughing. “Most people think I’m Dominican. A lot of Latin players speak Spanish to me, and they’re surprised that I don’t answer.”

Which simply proves Easley is worth more than a quick look. When Rene Gonzales suffered a broken arm last week and the Angels purchased Easley’s contract from triple-A Edmonton, it merely hastened Easley’s major league debut and gave the Angels extra time to evaluate the 22-year-old third baseman.

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“I don’t know the average age here, but I know I’m pretty young to be making it,” said Easley, who moved to California from New York when he was 11 to be with his father.

“I’m not going to pat myself on the back, but I did move pretty fast in the organization,” Easley said. “Maybe I’m just mature for my age.”

Mature enough, the Angels hope, to make the transition to a new position.

Easley was an outfielder at Lakewood High and Long Beach City College, and he played shortstop for virtually all of his three-plus minor league seasons. Originally planning to recall Easley in September, when rosters expand to 40, the Angels shifted him to third base a few weeks ago. When Gonzales was hurt, they promoted Easley instead of moving Gary Gaetti back from first base, having decided that Gaetti’s defensive skills at third have eroded.

If Easley wasn’t surprised by the promotion, he was by the timing.

“They put me over at third base the last week in triple A, I thought maybe for a September call-up to see how I was doing,” said Easley, who batted .289 for Edmonton in 108 games, with three home runs, 44 runs batted in and 26 stolen bases.

“It so happens there was a freak accident (Gonzales’ broken arm), and I got the call-up. I figured they wouldn’t move me to a different position without a reason, and it made sense.

“My coaches kind of hinted something was coming and said, ‘Take some ground balls at third base.’ But they left second and third open. I didn’t take it seriously, until one day in Portland they said: ‘You’re playing third.’ I just said, ‘OK.’ ”

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Easley started all four games of the Angels’ series in Oakland, getting his first hit, run batted in and error during Sunday’s 5-4 loss to the Athletics. He will probably start most of the remaining nine games on the Angels’ trip, with Gaetti seeing occasional duty at third.

“He has the physical tools to be a good player,” said first base coach Bobby Knoop, a major league second baseman for 14 years. “He seems to be very comfortable about himself as a player, and those are pluses. Then it’s probably a question of experience and knowledge of the game. . . . He could probably adapt (to playing third) and, being such a good athlete, probably adapt pretty well.”

Easley has chosen not to ask Gaetti for advice. “I don’t confront him with questions,” Easley said. “I want to figure things out myself. He has helped me on a few occasions, saying, ‘Relax, settle down,’ things like that.”

And Gaetti, a four-time Gold Glove winner at third, has chosen to wait for Easley to approach him.

“He’s going to have to learn how to play the position,” Gaetti said. “I don’t have a problem talking to him. He has to do what he thinks he should do, keep swinging the bat; if you make a mistake, try to learn from it.

“He’s in a tough position, having to learn how to play a position in the big leagues. There are some things he has to learn, positioning-wise. He’s going to have to learn the hitters, if (playing third) is what’s intended for him. He’s going to be all right.

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“Besides, I’m not in a real position to give him my expertise on playing third base. He doesn’t need to ask me.”

So far, Easley has decided an aggressive approach is best.

“They haven’t tried to overload me with things to think about,” he said. “I’ve just tried to react. You don’t have to play through every ball like at shortstop. You still have to read hops, and it’s a more straight-angle than all those crooked angles at short. Bunts are the one thing I’m trying to learn, how to play bunts, slow rollers, the pop-up like (Saturday’s, when he and catcher Mike Fitzgerald became confused and a pop-up wasn’t caught). Knowing when to take control and call somebody off on a bunt, little things like that.

“It’s on-the-job training for me, but my attitude is I expect to do it right 100 out of 100 times. I know I’m going to make some mistakes; I’m human. We all are. But I don’t want to make costly mistakes, and the ones I want to avoid are more so the mental ones, the ones that can be avoided.

“I try to stay within myself and keep my emotions under control. Sometimes, I get mad because I’m a perfectionist. I want to be better than I really can be. . . . If there’s any limitations, I’ll know it because I’ll be pushing to find out. I’m not at all intimidated. I know I can play this game no matter what position they play me.”

Those who have seen him play believe him, despite his 29 errors at shortstop and one in six games at third base for Edmonton.

“He’s very impressive,” said infielder Ken Oberkfell, Easley’s Edmonton teammate for half of the season. “I’ve never seen him play third base, but I know he’s a good offensive player. He ran well, had a little power, although in that ballpark you can’t really judge. He made some errors, but again, it’s tough to judge in that ballpark because that infield is like a minefield. He’s got a lot of talent.”

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