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Druley: DeJesus ‘works his tail off’ at ProForce

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Chris Browning (left), head of Batavia-based ProForce Sports Performance Training, works with Cubs outfielder David DeJesus this winter. DeJesus, who resides in Wheaton in the offseason, has been "training insane," per the company slogan, for the past 2 1/2 years. (Photo Provided)

BATAVIA – Cubs outfielder David DeJesus followed an indirect path to becoming part of the “Train Insane” faithful at ProForce Sports Performance Training, but these days he walks through the front door like anyone else.

DeJesus goes by “Dave” when he’s with owner Chris Browning and the rest of his clientele, and those pleasantries won’t change once he reports to spring training in Mesa, Ariz., next month.

Earlier this week, as temperatures hovered in single digits, DeJesus again navigated his SUV from his offseason home in Wheaton to the ProForce facility. He hardly blushed at the cold during his short walk to the building, where he unleashed similarly fluid movements for a third straight offseason.

“The things that you do here make you more explosive on the field, keep your body strong throughout a season and just give you confidence to go out there and play the game,” DeJesus said. “You know that your body is ready and ready for competition.”

DeJesus learned of ProForce through Atlanta Braves minor league outfielder Dan Brewer, a Lyons Township graduate whose mother was living in Batavia when the New York Yankees drafted him in 2008.

Brewer’s stepsister once trained with Browning before he started ProForce, which eventually led Brewer back to Batavia. He brought DeJesus along later. The two met through DeJesus’ former Kansas City Royals teammate, Chris Getz, while hitting at an offseason facility in Broadview earlier this decade.

Brewer heard DeJesus – entering his second season with the Cubs – had been training in Chicago and suggested he try ProForce, if only for the shorter commute. DeJesus quickly took to the gym’s emphasis on core strength and mix of old-school disciplines with newer strength training methods.

He’s been gladly blending in for the past 2 1/2 years.

“The nice thing about Dave is he doesn’t present himself as a big league baseball player who’s let a lot of the stuff go to his head,” Brewer said. “He’s a down-to-earth guy. Me being a guy who’s still working my way up, you know, I still have to work for everything I can get. But Dave’s been in the league for nine years or so now, and he still works his tail off, day in and day out. He knows that to stay there, you’ve got to still work hard. It’s nice that the kids get to come in and see him do that.”

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