If anyone needed further
proof that Aubrey Huff was back in the good graces
of most Orioles fans, it surfaced during the
seventh inning of Saturday night's game against
the Texas Rangers. And it didn't require him to
get a big hit or drive in a crucial run. The point
was made when nothing happened.
Huff came to the plate with two runners on base and two
outs, but his ground ball ended the threat. Returning
to the dugout, he was showered with silence. No booing,
no jeering, no obscene chants.
"Time heals everything," first baseman Kevin Millar
said.
So do 17 home runs and 54 RBIs, which Huff brings into
tomorrow night's game against the Toronto Blue Jays
that begins the final road trip before the All-Star
break.
A notoriously slow starter, Huff has erased some of
that reputation, along with the controversy that he
stirred up in the fall during an appearance on a Tampa,
Fla.-based shock jock's satellite radio show. Two more
hits on Sunday, including his 26th double, raised his
average to .281. He also had a sacrifice fly. Who saw
this coming?
Before the season, Huff was a career .236 hitter in
March and April, with when he hit 13 of his 156 home
runs, and .255 in May. He didn't pick up a bat or ball
until spring training after undergoing sports hernia
surgery over the winter. And he showed up at Fort
Lauderdale Stadium still grieving the loss of close
friend Joe Kennedy, the former Tampa Bay Rays pitcher
who died unexpectedly in November -- leading Huff to
change his uniform number to 17 as a tribute.
He was set up to fail, except he didn't. Though
bypassed for selection to the All-Star team, he ranks
among the American League leaders in doubles, homers,
RBIs, extra-base hits and total bases.
"I think I've found an offseason routine that works for
me, finally," he said. "I've tried everything from
hitting extra, working out harder, doing all kinds of
stuff. And it turns out what I needed was less. Less is
more for me."
When spring training began, hitting coach Terry Crowley
consulted daily with the training staff to gauge what
activities Huff could handle. Crowley worked with Huff
on the side, having him hit 20 balls off a tee for
three straight days, then 25 soft tosses. He would take
ground balls one morning, then go back to the tee.
Finally, he was cleared to take live batting practice
and appear in exhibition games, long after his
teammates had grown tired of the routine.
"Make no mistake, he's talented," Crowley said. "And
any time you have a talent like that, as long as you
don't injure him or have a setback, good things are
going to happen."
Huff, signed to a three-year contract in January. 2007,
went on his usual tear after the break last season,
batting .346 with nine homers, 28 RBIs and a .592
slugging percentage beginning Aug. 1. And nothing that
occurred once he returned home has bumped him off that
course.
"I really feel like at the midway point of last year,
Aubrey Huff found his swing again and maintained it,"
Crowley said. "Once he was healthy, he just picked it
up -- the same approach, the same stance, the same
everything, -- and it carried right through."
It also moved him past the regrettable comments he made
about the city of Baltimore on Bubba the Love Sponge's
show, which Huff insisted were uttered in jest as part
of an act. His lewd remarks about his favorite pre-game
activities only further incited fans and team
officials, who levied a hefty fine.
"That seems like a decade ago now. It really doesn't
enter my mind anymore," he said. "I still hear some
Bubba Army fans in the stands, but that's about it."
Huff made a pre-emptive phone call to his mother,
Fonda, after learning that he caused an uproar in
Baltimore.
"He said, 'You may as well know this because you're
going to hear about it,' " she said. "It got all blown
out of proportion. He knew better. When he went to the
University of Miami, that's the first thing they taught
him. Things will get turned around if you're not
careful. He just forgot. He let his guard down. He
really likes Baltimore."
Manager Dave Trembley said he wasn't concerned about
Huff because "success takes care of a lot of the
negative things, especially in this city, where it's so
work-oriented."
"People are very blue-collar," he said, "and they're
willing to give people a second chance."
Crowley said: "He's a funny guy," Crowley said. "He
likes to laugh at himself as much as he likes to laugh
at other things. I know he didn't mean to hurt anyone."
Said Millar: "There's nothing vicious in his body. It's
just a bad body."
"When people were talking about how we needed to get a
bigger bat, Aubrey Huff can be that bat," Millar added.
"He hit 30 home runs in the big leagues (34 in 2003).
You have that guy here for $7 million a year. I'm glad
to see him doing what he's capable of doing."
And it all started by doing less.
"In '03 and '04, when I was having the best years of my
career, I remember thinking, 'What was I doing?' I
didn't really hit a lot in the cage, I didn't really
look at a lot of video. I went out there and took
batting practice and played the game, made it simple as
possible," Huff said.
"Then I found myself constantly going in the cage,
working early, looking at video. Now I've tried to go
back to making it as simple as possible. Just see it
and hit it."
And if he makes a key out, which hasn't occurred nearly
as often this season, he's more likely now to be
forgiven. He's hearing less, as well.
"There's some boos in the other dugout," Crowley said.
"That's the only booing."
(baltimoresun.com)