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Samardzija pitching way toward bigs

Former Notre Dame WR inching closer to the big leagues

Samardzija Cubs BaseballAP
Iowa Cubs pitcher Jeff Samardzija left Notre Dame as the school’s all-time leader in receptions, receiving yards and TD catches.

DES MOINES, Iowa - Shortly after his promotion to Triple-A, the Iowa Cubs pulled a fast one on pitcher Jeff Samardzija.

The I-Cubs hung a makeshift No. 83 jersey in Samardzija’s locker, hazing the new guy the only way they knew how. Though Samardzija had long traded in the navy and gold of Notre Dame football for blue pinstripes, even he had to laugh.

Samardzija knows that until he proves otherwise, he’ll always be that floppy-haired wide receiver who chose baseball over the NFL.

Samardzija, who signed a 5-year, $10-million contract with the Cubs in 2007 despite speculation that he could have been a first-round pick in the NFL draft, made his debut for Iowa on June 24.

Samardzija is 1-1 with 3.00 earned run average in two Triple-A starts.

“They saw me playing every Saturday, but they didn’t see me playing every Friday, Saturday and Sunday in baseball. Obviously nowadays, you believe what you see, believe what you read in the paper or what you see on TV,” said Samardzija. “I don’t blame them for it. My job is to go out and show them that I can play baseball, too.”

Though Samardzija is now just one step from Wrigley Field, most folks still think of him as a football player. That’s a testament to his career at Notre Dame, the Irish’s national profile and the anonymity of the path Samardzija chose.

The 6-foot-5 wideout was quarterback Brady Quinn’s go-to guy in 2005-06, catching 155 passes and 27 touchdowns in his final two seasons to help lead the Irish to back-to-back BCS bowl appearances. He left Notre Dame as the school’s all-time leader in receptions, receiving yards and TD catches, many of the acrobatic variety.

To the few who noticed, Samardzija was also a workhorse for the Irish baseball team, going 21-6 in three seasons. The Chicago Cubs grabbed him in the fifth round of the 2006 amateur draft.

Samardzija posted a 2.70 ERA in 30 innings with Single-A Boise and Peoria in 2006. He decided to stick with baseball despite a brilliant senior year at Notre Dame, and the Cubs broke out their checkbook to keep him.

Samardzija was called up to Double-A Tennessee late in 2007 and went 3-3 with a 3.41 ERA. Despite a rocky start this season at Tennessee, where he walked 42 batters in 76 innings with an ERA of 4.86, Samardzija was promoted to Iowa.

The scouting report on Samardzija, according to Iowa pitching coach Mike Mason, is that he’s a “sinker, slider” guy with a complementary changeup and splitter. The athleticism that served Samardzija so well on the gridiron — just ask former Michigan State coach John L. Smith about that — also works to his benefit on the mound. So does a sinking fastball he can blow by hitters.

But Iowa wants to see Samardzija master the art of throwing quality off-speed pitches in hitter’s counts. Do that, Mason said, and Samardzija could become a major league starter.

“He’s just got good stuff, and the game kind of teaches you what goes where,” Mason said. “Is he ever going to look pretty picture perfect? No, because he doesn’t have to. He’s a good enough athlete to, when he’s finds a happy medium mechanically, he’ll be able to repeat it. And that’s all that matters.”

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When he was promoted to Iowa, Samardzija was met by a small media frenzy, both local and a contingent from his native Indiana. That usually doesn’t happen to players when they reach Des Moines, and Samardzija knows it’s because of what he did in the shadow of “Touchdown Jesus” at Notre Dame Stadium.

Still, Samardzija insists he has no regrets about walking away from football and taking the long road to the big leagues.

“It gets kind of old when you hear things like ‘Do you have any regrets, or do you wish you do something different,’ because I made the decision for the right reasons,” Samardzija said. “It had everything to do with, everyday when I woke up, what I wanted to go out and do. I wanted to go play baseball everyday.”

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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