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Lopez back with Braves, hoping to catch on as a backup

KISSIMMEE, Fla. -- Javy Lopez looks as though he never left.

"I've got my old locker, my old number," Lopez said Saturday,
surveying his surroundings after the second workout of his second
go-around with the Atlanta Braves. "You can't ask for anything
better."

Of course, a lot has changed since Lopez last played for the
Braves in 2003. Back then, he was a three-time All-Star catcher who
had just put up the best season of his career -- .328 with 43 homers
and 109 RBIs.

He left for a big-money deal with the Baltimore Orioles, but
never came close to matching what he did in Atlanta. After three
seasons of steadily dwindling production, Lopez found himself out
of a job last spring when he was cut by the Colorado Rockies.

His career appeared over.

"It was hard for me," Lopez conceded. "When you're watching
TV, watching the games, you're like, 'I should have been there."

He sat out the entire season, "doing the things I haven't done
in 20 years." He traveled extensively with his family, visiting
Mexico, Las Vegas, California and Puerto Rico. He became a Little
League dad, cheering on his 12- and 8-year-old sons.

But Lopez never lost his desire to get back on the field. He
began working with a personal trainer last August. He stayed in
touch with the Braves, especially good friend and former catching
mate Eddie Perez, now the team's bullpen coach.

Perez is the one who set up Lopez with another of the team's
coaches, Chino Cadahia, for twice- and three-times-a-week workouts
at a metro Atlanta high school, mainly to work on Lopez's suspect
defense.

Impressed with his work ethic, Cadahia sent word to the front
office: Hey, this guy might be worth taking a chance on. The Braves
signed the 37-year-old Lopez to a minor-league deal, inviting him
to camp as a non-roster player to compete for a backup job behind
All-Star Brian McCann.

Lopez is content to take on a reduced role.

"I'm happier than ever," he said. "I'm going to be a
backup-slash-coach."

There are no guarantees, of course. Lopez is battling for the
No. 2 job against two much-younger players, 26-year-old Brayan Pena
and 24-year-old Clint Sammons. The Braves will keep the player
who's most capable of filling in for McCann every fourth or fifth
day.

"It's not like Javy just walked into camp," manager Bobby Cox
said. "He's been working all winter. He never stopped. But it may
take him a little bit of time to get back into it."

Lopez knows this will be a much different job than the one he
had before.

"I have to prepare mentally on how to do that role," he said.
"Being a backup catcher is not as easy as being the starting
catcher. Playing every day kind of gets you ready automatically.
When you don't play every day, you have to make yourself get ready.
You have to make sure your body is ready for game time. The last
thing you want to do is come out of the (bullpen) cold and not
ready, then go into the game and do a pretty bad job."

In his prime, Lopez was an offensive force who never seemed to
spend much time worrying about his catching skills or handling
pitchers. He had five seasons with 20-plus homers and twice reached
100 RBIs.

Greg Maddux, a student in the art of pitching, usually was
paired with the backup catcher -- whoever that was -- during his 11
years with the Braves. While Cox insisted the arrangement had
nothing to do with Lopez, it was long suspected that Maddux
preferred to work with someone a little more devoted to his work
behind the plate.

"He said he wasted the last three years of his career," Perez
said. "So he's working on his catching, which is something that he
never did before."

During his sessions with Cadahia, Lopez focused on smoothing out
his footwork, improving his setup behind the plate, and becoming
more accurate on throws to second. Now that he's at spring
training, he'll add blocking pitches to his regimen.

Asked if he has any regrets about leaving the Braves, Lopez is
quick to remind everyone that it wasn't his choice. Atlanta had
already traded for his heir apparent, Johnny Estrada, and made no
effort to re-sign Lopez after his career season.

"I wasn't going to beg them and say, 'Please give me a
contract," Lopez said.

He never fit in with the Orioles -- specifically pointing a
finger at owner Peter Angelos, believing he instilled a tone of
fear that seeped into the clubhouse and made it difficult for
anyone to succeed.

"Every time I would go to that ballpark, I would compare the
Braves to the Orioles," Lopez said, moving his hands up and down
like a scale. "It was not even close. I really missed the way this
organization worked."

Now he's got a chance to go out on his terms, with the team he
came up with and spent most of his career.

"If you're going to quit," Lopez said, "it's better to quit
while you're working hard."