About five hours before first
pitch, and about two hours before the rest of his
teammates arrived for batting practice, Baltimore
Orioles first baseman Aubrey Huff met hitting
coach Terry Crowley on the field at Fenway Park,
hoping that together they could find a solution.
It was last July 31, about three months after Huff had
come to Baltimore with a record as an elite offensive
player, owner of a smooth left-handed swing that would
boost any lineup. He was just three years removed from
hitting 37 homers and driving in 107 runs in 2003 with
Tampa Bay, his best offensive season in the majors.
But after signing a three-year, $20 million free agent
contract, his first few months with the Orioles yielded
lots of frustration and very few hits. With Huff's
batting average languishing around .240 and his power
numbers down, Crowley reached out to the underachieving
player. "When he asks, that means he wants you to,"
Huff said about meeting the coach for early work.
When Huff arrived as instructed, Crowley gave him but
two pieces of instruction: 1. Stand taller in the
batter's box. 2. Aim for the Green Monster.
"If we didn't have that session, who knows?" said Huff,
looking back at the moment he rediscovered his swing.
"Something clicked."
Huff credits the changes made during the 20-minute
session that afternoon to what's shaping up to be an
impressive comeback season. With 17 home runs and 54
RBI through Baltimore's first 87 games, Huff is on pace
to hit 32 homers and drive in 100 runs, production that
approaches his career-best numbers of 2003.
"He's just simplified things," Orioles Manager Dave
Trembley said. "He's seeing it, hitting it and using
the whole field, not overthinking it. Obviously, his
M.O. has been a slow first half and a very strong
second half so, with that in mind, we have a lot to
look forward to if he stays the course in the last 2
1/2 months of the season."
A notoriously slow starter throughout his career, Huff
has bucked that trend with an impressive first half,
another unlikely development after sports hernia
surgery prevented him from even picking up a baseball
bat until spring training. Nevertheless, Huff has been
a catalyst in an Orioles offense that has defied
expectations.
When Trembley moved Huff into the cleanup role earlier
this season, the Orioles broke out of an early hitting
slump. And in recent days, Trembley has placed Huff in
the third spot to offer protection to Nick Markakis.
"It's made it really easy for me to put him in the
three spot," Trembley said. "I think it's a nice tandem
with he and Nicky hitting back to back."
Said Crowley: "He's everything we dreamed he was going
to be when we brought him over here as a free agent."
Such a statement would have been unthinkable a year
ago, when, by his admission, Huff was in a rut. At some
point that he said he can't recall, his swing devolved
into what he called a lunging motion, leaving him
unable to make consistent contact.
He resorted to trying to pull the ball on nearly every
at-bat and pitchers adjusted, feeding Huff a steady
diet of breaking pitches and change-ups. Even though he
rallied with a strong second half to finish with 15
homers and 78 RBI, his performance was so alarmingly
subpar that some experts projected him to finish with
worse numbers this season.
Just one year into his deal, many considered Huff a
free agent flop.
"Hitters go through strange things in their career,"
Crowley said. "He had drifted away from being the force
that he was. When I think back to '03, I remember a
monster. He had just gotten away from that a little
bit."
So that afternoon at Fenway, Crowley and Huff set about
turning back time. By simply putting Huff in a taller
stance, Crowley said it allowed for better leverage on
the ball, which made it easier to hit breaking pitches.
Just as important, the Green Monster in left field gave
Huff an inviting target to reinforce the second key
idea: going the other way.
Just a few pitches in, Crowley said that even Huff's
bat speed appeared improved.
"He instantly started driving balls off the Monster,
balls that I thought were going to go through the wall,
hitting balls over the wall," Crowley said. "And every
time we threw the ball in to him, he hit it into the
seats in right field. I knew we had touched on a
comfort zone."
Several times this season, Trembley has attributed
Huff's rebound to the ability to hit to the opposite
field.
"From that moment on, it's been a total turnaround,"
said Huff, who has hit .304 with 26 homers and 82 RBI
since that fateful clinic at Fenway. "This feels about
the way I felt in '03."
(washingtonpost.com)